Zoom in on images of the latest designer watches and luxury jewellery, plus unique wedding bands, unusual engagement rings, celebrities and more.
Regarded as one of the great jewellers of the 20th century, the largest private collection ...
Andrew Grima’s London store, which opened on Jermyn Street in 1966 and brought a radically ...
Andrew Grima reverse-set hexagonal amethysts into a scattering of matte 18-carat gold triangles in this ...
A highly articulated bib necklace by Andrew Grima, 1974, comprised of triangular-cut citrines and diamond, ...
A sketch by Andrew Grima of one of his radical watch designs, created in collaboration ...
Greenland watch from Andrew Grima’s groundbreaking “About Time” collection. The watch face, which is overlaid ...
One of Andrew Grima’s earliest designs from 1966. Featuring the designer’s signature textured gold wire ...
Lifelike “pencil shavings” brooch by Andrew Grima, 1968, cast in yellow gold and scattered with ...
Andrew Grima favoured the unusual over the obvious. Rather than using a faceted stone, he ...
Pendant by Andrew Grima, 1973. Part of the Sticks and Stones collection, it features a ...
The RL888 has a wardrobe of more than 40 different straps in classic Ralph Lauren ...
Ralph Lauren has launched a larger and infinitely more luxurious 38mm rose gold version of ...
This 38mm Ralph Lauren RL888 Snowfall watch features a delicate diamond setting designed to recreate ...
A high jewellery version of the RL888 in rose gold with a diamond-set bezel, diamond ...
Ralph Lauren’s RL888 Snowfall watch features the magic of snow-set diamonds with a practical stainless ...
Ralph Lauren’s RL888 watches have full access to a wardrobe of over 40 interchangeable straps ...
The personality of almost all the RL888 watch models can be altered in a matter ...
A large 2.23-carat Fancy Yellow diamond representing the Sun and a 1.00-carat white diamond for ...
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.