Grand Duchess Hilda’s Diamond Tiara (Image: Grand Ladies Site) |
Archives for 2016
Bejeweled Close-Ups: The Cameo Parure
Crown Princess Victoria wears the cameos on her wedding day (Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images) |
The parure of cameo jewelry that now belongs to the Swedish royal family is one of the most unique and interesting sets worn by royals today. The cameo suite was made in France during the first decade of the nineteenth century; researchers have argued very convincingly that the parure was owned and worn by Empress Josephine, first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Today, the cameos belong to the Bernadottes of Sweden, who inherited them via the Duke of Leuchtenberg. The tiara has become something of an unofficial bridal diadem for the Swedish royal women. (You can read a more complete timeline of the set’s history here.) The central cameo in the tiara depicts a scene from the myth of Cupid and Psyche, but each cameo is unique. Here’s a series of images that give us a close-up look at the set, which is made of cameos, gold, diamonds, and pearls.
The Cameo Tiara, worn by Queen Silvia of Sweden at the 2005 Nobels [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
The central cameo of the tiara, which features a scene from the myth of Cupid and Psyche [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
Another cameo from the tiara; this one features a neoclassical portrait [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
One of the gold and pearl anthemions that are interspersed between the tiara’s cameos. Note the delicate feathering in the gold design, as well as the tiny, graduated seed pearls [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
The necklace features three strands of pearls interspersed by portrait cameos framed in diamonds [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
Another view of the necklace and its three portrait cameos [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
The elaborate diamond clasp of the necklace [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
A close view of the bracelet, which features four strands of pearls interspersed with diamond-framed portrait cameos [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
One of the earrings from the parure, which features a diamond-framed cameo suspended from additional diamonds. Note that this earring features a portrait cameo of a soldier [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
The earrings are not a matched set; here is a look at the other earring, which features a different portrait cameo. (It’s hard to see here, but this one appears to feature a figure crowned with laurel. Perhaps symbolism related to war and peace/victory?) [Photo: Marc Piasecki/Getty Images] |
The brooch, possibly a later addition to the set, features a portrait cameo set in an elaborate diamond floral frame [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
Another angle on the cameo brooch, in slightly different lighting [Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images] |
The Marie Curie Daffodil Ring
The Marie Curie Daffodil Ring (Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images) |
In 2008, a special ring was offered for sale by Sotheby’s: a diamond and peridot cocktail ring shaped like a daffodil. The piece had been specially created to raise money for a very important cause: care for those with terminal illnesses.
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images |
The ring was made by Charlie Pragnell for the George Pragnall jewelry firm, which is located in Stratford-upon-Avon. The ring was crafted to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Marie Curie, a charitable foundation which provides nursing resources and home care for those with terminal illnesses. You’ll probably recognize the charity’s name: Marie Curie was a scientist who did pioneering work with radioactive substances, and she was the first woman to win the Nobel Prize. Sadly, her work involved exposure to radiation that would later lead to her own death.
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images |
The Marie Curie charity was founded in the UK in 1948, and its initial funds came from the donation of a diamond engagement ring. Sixty years later, Pragnell designed this diamond ring in the shape of a daffodil, the charity’s logo, to help fund the charity’s work. Here’s how Sotheby’s described the piece in the lot notes for the auction: “It is crafted in 18 carat yellow and white gold, centring on a rare oval Fancy Vivid Orange Yellow diamond weighing 0.82 carats, its petals pavé-set with near-colourless diamonds, with subtle green peridots to the stem and leaf.”
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images |
The sale of the ring raised £50,000 to fund the work of Marie Curie Nurses in the United Kingdom. I love when beautiful things can help to support important causes. So many of us are thinking about ways to help make the lives of others easier and brighter during this holiday season — if you could design a piece of jewelry to support a cause, what would it be?
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- …
- 239
- Next Page »