Zoom in on images of the latest designer watches and luxury jewellery, plus unique wedding bands, unusual engagement rings, celebrities and more.
The Address necklace features an impressive 10.01-carat emerald-cut diamond inspired by an archive design from ...
The Spark necklace takes the form of a question mark and uses eight different diamond ...
The Silhouette jewel is made up of seven metres of 2,500 diamond-set beads and can ...
The Untamed necklace is a question mark necklace that runs the entire length of the ...
Shoulder ornament with flower motifs and pearl circa 1880 from Boucheron’s archives that inspired the ...
Claire Choisne found this first drawing of question mark necklace from 1879 by Paul Legrand ...
The central diamond in the Address necklace can be taken off and worn as a ...
The first question mark necklace from 1879 featured ivy, echoing Frédéric Boucheron’s love of the ...
The dazzling Silhouette jewel has hidden clasps that allow it drape across and along the ...
Claire Choisne’s The Spark necklace is a re-interpretation of one of the first question mark ...
The six compositions of Impermanence unfold in reverse order, from light to darkness — a ...
Composition No. 1: Worn on the body, the Vantablack poppy almost disappears into shadow, leaving ...
Composition No. 1: A poppy and sweet pea branches in Vantablack, a material developed for ...
Composition No. 2: The magnolia necklace traces petals and branches in diamonds and black spinels, ...
Composition No. 3: The wisteria becomes a head jewel via a comb system; its ultra-light ...
Composition No. 3 brings wisteria into high jewellery: cascading diamond and mother-of-pearl petals spill from ...
Composition No. 4 juxtaposes cyclamen and oat with a diamond butterfly and caterpillar, turning fragile ...
Composition No. 4 features a caterpillar transformed into a brooch, its diamond-paved body finished with ...
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.