Joanna Hardy Completes Gemstone Trilogy with ‘Sapphire’ Book

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Joanna Hardy Completes Gemstone Trilogy with ‘Sapphire’ Book

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I'm so glad I found this for our September babies and sapphire lovers before the end of the month, and I'm coveting the bracelet in the lead pic. It's simply PHAbulous, and I love that it even has conch pearls in the mix! 8-)

Joanna Hardy Completes Gemstone Trilogy with ‘Sapphire’ Book

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Bina Goenka’s Ikebana cuff, 2020, depicting a blossoming branch that twists around the wrist, set with colored diamonds, pearls, conch pearls, emeralds, and flowers of 22.16 carats of sapphires of every color. (Bina Goenka)

"New York—In time for holiday gifting, the perfect book for jewelry lovers is out this fall.

Published by Thames & Hudson, in association with Violette Editions in partnership with Gemfields, “Sapphire: A Celebration of Color” by Joanna Hardy completes the fine jewelry expert and author’s trilogy of gemstone books.

“Emerald” was published in 2013 and “Ruby” in 2017.

Hardy’s 30-plus year career spans many facets of the jewelry industry.

The British author started out as a goldsmith, then joined De Beers as a rough diamond valuer. She moved into the auction world when she started at Phillips in London.

She is best known for her 14-year tenure at Sotheby’s, where she was the senior jewelry specialist and auctioneer, responsible for the jewelry auctions in New York, Geneva, and London.

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“Sapphire” by Joanna Hardy and published by Thames & Hudson, in association with Violette Editions in partnership with Gemfields, is out in November. Courtesy of Thames & Hudson

In the introduction to “Sapphire” she writes: “Over the past 10 years I have travelled the globe researching for ‘Emerald,’ ‘Ruby,’ and ‘Sapphire,’ and it has been a journey I would not have missed. I see this trilogy as a global team effort, and I count myself incredibly lucky to have met people who have shared their stories with me and to have worked with the ever-helpful world brands, auction houses, cutters, miners, goldsmiths, designers and historians who have generously shared their knowledge with me.

“I am often asked what my favorite stone is, and my reply has always been I love the best of any gemstone; but, since writing this book, I think my heart has been won by the sapphire of many colors.”

As with her previous books, Hardy explores the sapphire through several lenses.

She begins by delving into early sapphire trading that brought the stone found in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Ethiopia, and France (and more locations like Montana and Madagascar since) worldwide, sharing images of ancient and antique jewelry styles featuring the stone.

Moving through history, Hardy notes sapphire’s notable moments, across cultures and continents, like carved sapphire cameos and even statues, originating from Asia and Europe.

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A transformable headband/collier de chien, c. 1921, by maker Michel Ballada for Chaumet, and set with seven oval cabochon Ceylon sapphires, graduating in size—the largest weighing 47.34 carats—along three diamond-set lines and within crescent-shaped surrounds. An 8.20-carat sugarloaf sapphire decorates the clasp. Private collection / Courtesy of Albion Art Jewellery Institute, Japan.

An entire chapter is dedicated to sapphires in royal jewelry, featured in a number of crowns for European royalty, as well as jewelry worn by members of their respective courts.

The extensive accounting of important royal sapphires spans to modern monarchs, like Queen Elizabeth II, and even the blue sapphire engagement ring Prince Charles gave to the late Princess Diana that their son, Prince William the Duke of Cambridge, subsequently gave to his wife, the Duchess of Cambridge.

“Sapphire” also explores some of the most enduring jewelry designers to have worked with the stone, particularly in the 20th century, like Louis Comfort Tiffany, Jacques Cartier, and other members of the Cartier family.

Jewelry houses like Boucheron and Van Cleef & Arpels and some of their most spectacular pieces are also highlighted.

Other makers such as Suzanne Belperron and Oscar Heyman are highlighted in this wide-sweeping account that reads like a “best of” dedicated to the namesake gemstone.

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A “bib” necklace, 1940s, of cabochon sapphires interspersed with brilliant-cut diamonds by Suzanne Belperron, made by Groëné et Darde for Herz-Belperron. To achieve the effortless appearance of the color blends, Belperron is rumored to have tipped the sapphires onto a table and then carefully plotted them on the design. Courtesy of Belperron, LLC / Private collection (photo by David Behl)

One chapter even highlights the art of collecting, delving into the psyche of collectors who experience the sapphire’s “gravitational pull,” ... "

https://www.nationaljeweler.com/article ... phire-book
PinkDiamond
ISG Registered Gemologist


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