Zoom in on images of the latest designer watches and luxury jewellery, plus unique wedding bands, unusual engagement rings, celebrities and more.
These late 18th century diamond pendant earrings sold for £41,250 at Sotheby's London in 2014.
Lot 195, a 1920s Cartier diamond bracelet (estimate: £12,000-18,000).
Lot 296, a late 19th century coloured, natural pearl and diamond necklace (estimate: £30,000-50,000; unsold).
Lot 282, Lacloche Frères 1920s gem set, enamel and diamond vanity case, set with three ...
This Raymond Yard coral, onyx and diamond dress set sold for £13,750 and 1920s Cartier ...
Lot 105, from the Daisy Fellowes collection, an early 20th century Jaipur enamel, rock crystal ...
Lot 104, from the Daisy Fellowes collection, a gold, emerald and pearl ring/bracelet (estimate: £3,000-5,000; ...
Lot 103, from the Daisy Fellowes collection, a pair of 1950s ruby, emerald and diamond ...
Lot 102, from the Daisy Fellowes collection, an emerald, ruby and diamond ring featuring a ...
The historical Hutton-Mdivani Jadeite Bead necklace, once owned by socialite and Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutto, ...
The Hutton-Mdivani necklace, estimated to sell for upwards of US$12.8 million, sold for a record-breaking ...
Barbara Hutton's jadeite necklace - the finest jadeite necklace in the world - fetched $27.4m, ...
An emerald and diamond ring by Bulgari, circa 1964, set with a 16.62ct step-cut emerald, ...
Gina Lollobrigida's emerald and diamond earclips, by Bulgari circa 1964, sold for CHF 293,000 at ...
During the coronation of Nicholas II, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna wears the small imperial ...
The Régent pearl. Image by: Sotheby's
A devant de corsage from a parure. The oval aquamarines could be detached to serve ...
A rare 1890 case by Michael Perkhin with mother-of-pearl and gold, circa 1890. Image by: ...
Communications firm Edelman released its annual Trust Barometer[1] report last week to coincide with the gathering of world leaders at Davos. As the most influential, powerful and wealthy were gearing up for a week of talks focused on the future of capitalism and meeting the global goals, the Barometer provided stark insight into the challenges we face. Fifty-six percent of people believe capitalism does more harm than good.