Showing posts with label jewellery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jewellery. Show all posts

October 05, 2016

Elizabeth Taylor's Bulgari Jewellery Goes On Show In Melbourne


                                                                    



                                                                  

A new exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) will showcase priceless Bulgari jewellery, including emerald and diamond jewels gifted to actress Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Cleopatra.

The show, Italian Jewels: Bulgari Style, will feature more than 80 pieces of jewellery with a focus on the La Dolce Vita period of the 1950s and '60s, when Rome was a popular location for Hollywood films.

Among the collection are jewels gifted to Taylor by Richard Burton, her fifth husband, including an emerald ring he gave her on set of 1963 film Cleopatra, where their love affair first began.

Taylor later auctioned the ring, which featured a stunning octagonal step-cut Columbian emerald, with the note "Wear it with love!".

Bulgari's brand and heritage creator Lucia Boscaini, who was in Melbourne for the show's opening, said jewellery was defining for leading actresses of the past such as Taylor, who often wore her own pieces in her films.

"That's why I believe the majority of them used to wear their own jewels in movies.
"You see it for Elizabeth Taylor, Ingrid Bergman, Anita Ekberg — a long list of names. I think that's really very much linked to the wellbeing you feel wearing important jewels. 

"Elizabeth Taylor knew very well the precious gemstones and she used to be very sophisticated in selecting what she liked and what she didn't. 

"That's very special, I would say. I don't know if today it's the same because it's a completely different kind of world."

Ms Boscaini said the eight jewels that comprise Bulgari's Elizabeth Taylor collection were purchased at auction for about $39 million in 2011.

"How much is it worth today? I can't really say. It would be a little bit more than that, because of course it's becoming more and more valuable.

Paola Di Trocchio, the NGV's fashion and textiles curator, said Taylor's jewels were stunning.

"The emeralds are just absolutely exquisite. The romantic story behind them is also beautiful," she said.

Some of the handcrafted jewels would have taken a year or more to create, she added.
"They are all one offs and they are all of the highest quality," she said.

Other pieces in the show include a ruby and diamond necklace worn by Sophia Loren in Robert Altman's 1994 film Pret-a-Porter and a diamond necklace worn on the red carpet by British actress Keira Knightley. (the neckace worn by Claudia Cardinale below).

The majority of the pieces in the show come from Bulgari's own collection, but pieces have also been loaned from private collectors and the National Museum of Qatar.
The free show at the NGV International will open on September 30 and will run to January 29, 2017.
With many thanks to the ABC


                                                                   
Top picture:

Elizabeth Taylor in a publicity photograph for The V.I.P.s (1963) movie wearing her Bulgari platinum, emerald and diamond tremblant brooch; and Colombian emerald brooch with earrings, 1963

                                                                

Necklace 1989
gold, emerald, amethyst, ruby, diamond 37.0 x 3.0 cm
Bulgari Heritage Collection, Rome 


                                                                 


                                                               

Elizabeth Taylor wearing an array of Bulgari jewels at the 20th Anniversary Gala of Unicef at the Théâtre National de Chaillot in Paris, 1967 

                                                               

Tunisian-born Italian actress Claudia Cardinale featured in Vogue Italia wearing a Bulgari necklace and a bracelet (worn as a necklace), 1966


                                                               


                                                                  



Italian actors Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni on the set of the film Prêt-à- Porter (Ready to Wear) (1994), directed by American Robert Altman. Loren wears a Bulgari necklace and earrings in gold with rubies and diamonds.

                                                                      

Ingrid Bergman in 1963 posing for a picture on the set of the movie The Visit (1964)

                                                                     



Bib necklace 1965
gold, emerald, amethyst, turquoise, diamond





Bracelet 1960
gold, sapphire, diamond


                                                                     


Gina Lollobrigida wearing Bulgari necklace and earrings at the David di Donatello Awards,1958 gold, platinum, ruby, emerald, sapphire, diamond.

Additional pictures and more information with many thanks to Vogue.



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May 25, 2016

Ancient Gemstone Lapis Back In Fashion


                                                                       



Lapis is a material so ancient its name simply means “stone”. In ­antiquity, lapis was the most valuable gemstone of all, prized for its scarcity as much as its looks. 

“Whole economies were built around it,” says Aja Raden, author of Stoned: Jewelry, Obsession, and How Desire Shapes the World. Also called lapis lazuli, or “blue stone”, this hot property has been found in Neolithic graves and strikingly rims the eyes of King Tut’s golden death mask.

                                                                      


The love for lapis hasn’t dulled a bit, and today jewellery designers such as Aurelie Bidermann, Fernando Jorge, Pamela Love, Siobhan Way and Brooke Garber Neidich of the Chicago-based ­Sidney Garber Fine Jewelry company are gravitating to the material for its standout colour.

“The rich deep blue and gold flecks have made it one of the most sought-after stones,” says Neidich, who recently collaborated with London-based fashion designer Duro Olowu on a lapis jewellery collection, available in the Sidney Garber store on New York’s ­Madison Avenue. The pair fixed on lapis to complement the palette of Olowu’s boldly patterned women’s clothing. “Offsetting gold with a luminous stone like lapis allowed us to create our statement pieces,” says Olowu.

This season, lapis also shows up in chunky rings and sculpted pendants, delicate earrings, thin bangles and even on Hermes watch faces. These pieces really pop on the season’s neutral-toned minimalist tops and are gutsy enough to avoid being overwhelmed by colourful pattern-blocked dresses.

Traditionally lapis was not just a precious object but a holy one. “Just as the ancient Egyptians worshipped the sun,” Raden says, “the ancient Sumerians worshipped the night sky”, for which the ­lazurite-rich blue stone flecked with yellowy pyrite — often known as “fool’s gold” — was a natural stand-in. 

Ishtar, the ­Sumerian goddess of love, traditionally wore a massive lapis necklace; the blue stone is also ­associated with Cleopatra, who may have identified with the shade’s seductiveness.

Aurelie Bidermann took inspiration from ancient Egypt for her delicately engraved scarab beetle pendant; in Egyptian mythology, the scarab represented immortality, she says.
Bidermann’s over-size cocktail ring nestles a square lapis stone in a shiny golden coil. Each ring is slightly different, ­reflecting the stone’s idiosyncrasies. “Imperfect stones have more character,” Bidermann says. “Every stone tells its own story.”

Jewellery designers welcome the challenge of modernising this age-old material, and it’s not just women who benefit from what Perth-based jeweller Siobhan Way calls its “rich celestial blue with a history of deep spiritual and royal significance”.

Way’s Lithos collection features lapis in round faceted cufflinks with an off-centre point, and she uses the stone “to reference the colour of the night sky. Flecked with golden pyrite it is its own constellation. It’s the perfect masculine blue but equally elegant when worn by a woman,” she says.

“While it is referenced as a traditional gemstone, it lends itself to be used in a modern way, it is easy to cut and the rough comes in large pieces so you can really have fun with it.
“I am working on a bespoke women’s piece at the moment with large angular facets of blue which contrast so beautifully against pink gold. Modern and elegant …”
And sophisticated enough for modern-day gods and ­goddesses.

                                                                


Etro Gold-plated, lapis lazuli and turquoise cuff priced at $661.

                                                                        

By Kimberly Chrisman Campbell
With many thanks to The Australian

                                                                      

 Picture credit for Lapis,diamond and turquoise brooch: Peter Shemonsky



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February 15, 2016

Australian Company Lucapa Finds Huge Diamond In Angola



                                                                  

                                                                  
                                                                   
Diamonds are meant to be worn on the finger, not be the size of a finger.
However, a diamond found in Angola by a small Australian-listed company, Lucapa Diamond, would make for a huge sparkler.

At 404 carats, Lucapa said it was the biggest diamond found in Angola and the biggest ever discovered by an Australian company.
The company, citing Wikipedia, said it was the 27th biggest diamond found in the world.
The diamond came from the Lulo mine, 40 per cent owned by Lucapa.

Lucapa shares rose 29 per cent on Monday after the announcement.

A photograph released by the company showed the stone measuring about seven centimetres in length.

Lucapa shares were 9.5¢ higher at 41.5¢ in afternoon trading on Monday.

Lucapa chief executive Stephen Wetherall said the company would continue efforts to find the source of the huge diamond.

The find came just months after another company, Lucara Diamond, found a 1111 carat diamond in Botswana.

It was said to be the world's second-largest diamond, behind the 3106 carat Cullinan diamond found in South Africa in 1905.

By Peter Ker

With many thanks to the SMH

Related:

Padmanabhaswamy Temple Treasure: Worth $22 Billion 

The Most Expensive Coloured Diamonds in the World

 "Pink Star" Diamond sells for record $89m

Elizabeth Taylor's famous pearl sells for $11.84m at NYC auction

Sotheby's to sell 400-year-old diamond - The Beau Sancy

Christie's To Auction 'Perfect' Diamond: Mined in Botswana

White diamond set to fetch record $39 million at Sotheby's auction

Archduke Joseph Gem To Fetch At Least $15m at Auction

Elizabeth Taylor Quotes

South Africa's Cullinan Mine Unearths 'Exceptional' 29.6-carat Blue Diamond 

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Cartier Exhibition Features Pieces Once Owned By Elizabeth Taylor and Grace Kelly 

The Bahia Emerald - The 400 Million Dollar Rock 

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Argyle Diamonds: Pretty In Pink 

Up On Sale Pink Diamond Could Fetch $28 million

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