Inside the history between crown jewels and luxury brands: Queen Elizabeth and Princess Diana inspired Garrard, Cartier was a go-to for Indian royalty and Boucheron paid homage to Maharaja of Patiala
- British jeweller Garrard uses a Windsor motif inspired by the Girls of Great Britain and Ireland tiara and has worked with the 530.20-carat Cullinan I, the world’s largest cut and colourless diamond
- Chaumet’s muse, Empress Joséphine of France, loved tiaras and the brand released its Ondes et Merveilles 2022 collection featuring the Chant de Sirènes necklace
Crown jewels are the pinnacle of craftsmanship and the maisons lucky enough to be commissioned to create new wonders delve deep into their archives for sufficiently glorious inspiration.
Chaumet’s beloved muse, Empress Joséphine of France, was known for her love of tiaras. Two centuries later, the maison brought out a collection dedicated to the empress. New pear-shaped horological interpretations and high jewellery sparklers set with pear-cut gems pay tribute to her favourite shape. The Déferlante high jewellery collection includes a necklace with a central pear-cut diamond of 3.57 carats. Similarly, the Ondes et Merveilles collection, unveiled by Chaumet in summer, features the Chant de Sirènes necklace, ring and earrings realised with pearls, diamonds and tourmaline, celebrating the empress’ fascination with pearls.
Boucheron’s creative director Claire Choisne pored over the 149 historic references and sketches to pay homage to the Maharaja of Patiala, Bhupinder Singh. In 1928, he arrived at Boucheron with 40 members of his staff, and iron safes containing diamonds, rubies, emeralds and pearls. Spurred by the drive to discover new design possibilities, Choisne pays homage to this royal treasure with the New Maharajahs collection.