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Fabergé: Royal Gifts featuring the Trellis Egg Surprise will be on display April 10 through April 18, 2018. The special exhibition is included in the permanent exhibit hall admission. For ticket ...
9 The 7.7-centimeter-tall Rose Trellis Egg, created in 1907 from gold, enamel, and strings of tiny diamonds. ... 17 Of the more than 50 eggs Faberge created for the Russian royal family, ...
For Czar Alexander III, the Faberge Eggs were a token of love and affection, ... In 1892, the Diamond Trellis Egg, with a lattice of rose-cut diamonds surrounding its jade shell, ...
It's like putting Humpty Dumpty back together again. After a hiatus of nearly a century, Faberge is getting back into the Easter egg business, with the participation of descendants of the founder ...
The Imperial Diamond Trellis Egg, originally an Easter gift from Russian czar Alexander III to his wife in 1892, belongs to a Houston couple whose private collection of items created by Faberge is ...
VideoTom Parker Bowles stands among the fiberglass eggs that will be painted and hidden throughout London. Fabergé is of course known for its jeweled eggs. In London, the luxury jewelry house is ...
Fabergé eggs: Jewels of the Russian crown 04:44. Easter eggs don't come more drop-dead opulent than this: Peter Carl Fabergé's jeweled masterpieces were designed for the Russian tsars to give to ...
Peter Carl Fabergé, the Diamond Trellis egg (1892). Photo by Randall Pugh Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license. Sarah Cascone October 25, 2015 Share Share This Article.
A Faberge egg and the jeweled elephant designed to fit inside it will be reunited for the first time in almost a century thanks to a loan from Queen Elizabeth II to a Texas museum. Latest U.S.
The Imperial Diamond Trellis Egg, originally an Easter gift from Russian czar Alexander III to his wife in 1892, belongs to a Houston couple whose private collection of items created by Faberge is ...
A Faberge egg and the jeweled elephant designed to fit inside it are being reunited for the first time in almost a century thanks to a loan from Queen Elizabeth II to a Texas museum.
A Faberge egg and the jeweled elephant designed to fit inside it are being reunited for the first time in almost a century thanks to a loan from Queen Elizabeth II to a Texas museum.