Zoom in on images of the latest designer watches and luxury jewellery, plus unique wedding bands, unusual engagement rings, celebrities and more.
The collection also includes watches such as the Piaget Golden Oasis Vegetal Lace model with ...
The Diamond veil ring has a 13.15 carat Madagascar sapphire with 72 brilliant-cut diamonds that ...
The Blue Waterfall earrings capture the sun reflecting on water droplets moving through the air ...
A 4.1-carat Sri Lankan sapphire is framed by 26 sapphires and 10 marquise-cut diamonds in ...
Piaget has made something of a speciality of high jewellery ear cuffs. The sinuous shape ...
Evoking a verdant garden lush with vegetation, the Piaget Golden Oasis Luxuriant Oasis necklace drips ...
The lush leaves of a desert oasis are captured in over 12 carats of marquise-cut ...
Working gold to create rich textures that catch the light is a speciality of the ...
Vividly coloured spinels, rubies and sapphires and a burst of textured gold recreate a shimmering, ...
As light as the rustling of palm leaves, the Desert Palm earrings marry Piaget’s skill ...
Capturing the gentle movement of palm leaves, the Desert Palm necklace in rose gold is ...
Adding to its collection of watches made from sapphire crystal, the new blue version requires ...
The Richard Mille RM 11-02 Le Mans Classic is equipped with a flyback chronograph, an ...
Inspired directly and using materials employed by Airbus Corporate Jets, the shape of the titanium ...
Taking cutting edge technology into the very strap of the watch, the new Carbon TPT ...
Alexander Calder’s ‘Brooch’ in hammered brass and steel wire, unique, 1940. Courtesy of Louisa Guinness ...
Meret Oppenheim’s ‘Fur Bracelet’ and ‘Fur Ring’ in burnished gold and fur.
Meret Oppenheim’s ‘Sugar Cube Ring’, silver plated in gold, sugar cube and synthetic corundum. The ...
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.