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#The Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch
the-jewel-catalogue · 6 months
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The Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch
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The exquisite sapphire, diamond and 18k white gold pendant was designed by Saskatchewan-based jeweller Hillberg & Berk.
The 4.39 carat Sapphire Jubilee Brooch features more than 400 diamonds and 48 Canadian sapphires sourced from Baffin Island. Its sleek snowflake design is an ode to the chilly landscape of the Arctic.  
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corbenic · 1 month
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top five royal tiaras and other jewellery!
TIARAS:
1. Greville Emerald Kokoshnik
2. Brabant Laurel Wreath Tiara
3. Empress Eugénie’s Meander Tiara
4. Danish Crown Emerald Tiara
5. Swedish Aquamarine Kokoshnik
EARRINGS:
1. Kate Middleton’s wedding earrings
2. Bahrain Pearl Earrings
3. Queen Máxima’s tanzanite earrings
4. Princess Grace’s diamond and pearl wedding gift earrings
5. Grand Duchess Maria Teresa’s wedding earrings
NECKLACES:
1. Andamooka Opal necklace
2. Queen Camilla’s pink topaz choker
3. Luxembourg aquamarine necklace
4. Delhi Durbar necklace
5. Processional necklace
BROOCHES:
1. Cullinan V
2. Williamson Pink Diamond
3. Prince Albert Sapphire
4. Bird of Paradise Jubilee
5. Canadian Sapphire Snowflake
BRACELETS:
1. Edinburgh wedding bracelet
2. Queen Máxima’s diamond bracelet with her daughters’ names
3. Queen Elizabeth II’s South African diamond bracelet
4. The Duchess of Sussex’s wedding bracelet (Reflection de Cartier)
5. Swedish Cameo bracelet
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elizabethii · 5 years
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Her Majesty attends day one of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse on June 18, 2019
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europesroyalsjewels · 5 years
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Canadian Sapphire Snowflake Brooch ♕ Official Gift - State Property, Currently worn by Queen Elizabeth II 
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grandmaster-anne · 2 years
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Queen Elizabeth II (wearing her Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch, designed by jewellers Hillberg & Berk, which she received from the Governor General of Canada David Johnston in 2017 to mark her Sapphire Jubilee) looks on as Zara Tindall greets Sophie, Countess of Wessex as they attend day one of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse on June 18, 2019
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crownedlegend · 6 years
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Queen Elizabeth II stands with Philippe of Belgium and Queen Mathilde in the Grand Corridor at Windsor Castle- 14 July 2018
Her Majesty wears her new  Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch brooch!!!
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http://queensjewelvault.blogspot.com/2018/07/visit-from-king-and-queen-of-belgians.html
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royalpain16 · 7 years
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Sapphire Brooch given to Queen Elizabeth II commemorating her Sapphire Jubilee from The Canadian people, July 19, 2017.
The Sapphire Jubilee Brooch was made in Canada by Hillberg & Berk. The design is a snowflake shaped like the North Star
48 Canadian sapphires of varying color and shape, totaling 10.19 carats
More than 400 diamonds of varying size, including Maple Leaf certified diamonds, totaling 4.39 carats
Certified 18K Canadian white gold
The brooch is 61mm tall and 66mm wide
This distinctive piece will be added to the Queen’s collection of sapphire jewelry. The sapphires are unique Canadian beluga sapphires from Baffin Island, Canada’s only known sapphires, discovered near the hamlet of Kimmirut on Baffin Island. 
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imperiumsinefine · 7 years
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Queen Elizabeth II visits Canada House in London as part of the celebrations for Canada 150.
Outgoing Governor-General, David Johnson, presented Her Majesty with the Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake brooch on behalf of the Canadian people.
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fashioncurrentnews · 6 years
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La Regina Elisabetta all’arrivo di Trump indossa una spilla regalata da Obama
Sappiamo benissimo che la Regina Elisabetta ama le spille e che ha numerosi cofanetti di gioielli reali ricolmi di questi piccoli (o grandi) gingilli. Ma “come” le sceglie? Sicuramente in armonia con il look reale, fatto di completi accesi o pastello e cappellini in coordinato.
Questa volta, però, ha fatto chiacchierare la scelta della Regina Elisabetta II nel sfoggiare, proprio all’arrivo di Trump, una spilla regalata dall’ex Presidente degli Stati Uniti d’America, Barack Obama.
Coincidenze? Sappiamo bene che i membri reali, per protocollo, non possono prendere posizioni politiche: è emblema il caso di Kate Middleton in abito verde sul red carpet dei Bafta 2018, non aderendo in modo esplicito al movimento Time’s Up.
Infatti, la Regina Elisabetta II non si è mai espressa direttamente in merito alla vittoria Trump, ma questo accessorio prezioso lascia spazio a diversi rumors. Infatti, guardando (o analizzando) attentamente le tre spille indossate in occasione del soggiorno di Trump nel Regno Unico, abbiamo dedotto che la visita ufficiale non è stata poi così gradita.
Oltre al monile vintage anni 50 regalato da Obama ( a forma di fiore verde, di oro giallo 14 carati, diamanti e agata), la Regina ha anche indossato la Palm Leaf Brooch, ovvero la spilla delle ‘tristi occasioni‘, portata al funerale di Sua Maestà.
©Getty Images
Un messaggio politico ancora più sottile si cela dietro alla Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch, nonché dono del Canada, un Paese con cui l’attuale presidente statunitense non ha ottime relazioni.
Ovviamente la casa reale si discosta da qualsiasi supposizione, ma rimane inficiato il dubbio sul possibile messaggio politico che Elisabetta II ha voluto condividere con il suo popolo. E non solo.
L'articolo La Regina Elisabetta all’arrivo di Trump indossa una spilla regalata da Obama sembra essere il primo su Vogue.it.
from Vogue.it https://ift.tt/2Nt5Uqp from Blogger https://ift.tt/2Lwr6vk
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In a world where fashion increasingly doubles as a form of political statement or protest and the first lady’s jacket choice is a partisan tinderbox, it’s no surprise that a possible new example of fashion-based progressive idealism is making headlines.
What is surprising is the source: Queen Elizabeth’s jewelry. A viral twitter thread is suggesting her majesty may have been using her trademark brooches to send subtle messages repudiating the Trump administration and its policies during the president’s much-discussed visit to London last week.
The queen wore three brooches during Trump’s visit, and each of them — at least according to the online fandom with an appetite for Intense Brooch Politics — was an act of subtle nose-thumbing.
The inciting Twitter thread was published by Twitter user SamuraiKnitter, who is apparently the internet’s preeminent brooch decoder. A writer based in Pennsylvania, SamuraiKnitter described herself to Vox as a longtime history and fashion nerd who’s gifted with “an ability to put together jumbled facts into a coherent picture.” Her theories have caused the hashtags #BroochDecoderRing and #BroochWarfare to spread, and inspired Vice to label the affair “Broochgate.”
#BroochDecoderRing The following data relies heavily on the work of the blogger at “Her Majesty’s Jewel Box”. If you swing by there (I will be linking), BE ADVISED THE BLOGGER WANTS NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS POLITICAL STUFF THAT IS NOT WHY SHE IS THERE so take it easy.
— Bitch. STILL my superhero name. (@SamuraiKnitter) July 15, 2018
But what does it all mean? Is there a meaning behind the queen’s jewels? Was she really sipping subtle tea over Trump while having actual tea with him?
In a word: possibly. Let’s take a closer look.
Her majesty’s brooches are a ubiquitous fashion statement — they’ve been a prominent part of her wardrobe her whole life, and her fondness for them is so well-known that they’ve become a common gift presented to her by foreign dignitaries and other guests and friends. And on the internet, there’s a small but thriving band of jewel watchers and bloggers, broadcasting the #TiaraAlert and documenting royal jewels from around the globe, with an eye toward Queen Elizabeth’s in particular. One of these blogs, Order of Splendor, drew so much interest for its posts about the queen’s brooches that its author created a spinoff, the Queen’s Jewel Vault, just to chronicle the royal bling.
As that blogger has explained, “There are brooches representing countries, organizations, and regiments as well as brooches given as gifts and brooches inherited with great historical and sentimental significance.”
And these jewels are frequently interpreted to carry significant meanings beyond “here’s a shiny thing on my lapel.” For instance, there’s the huge True Lover’s Knot brooch, which the queen wore at two royal weddings — the 1960 wedding of her sister Princess Margaret, and the 2011 wedding of her grandson Prince William.
Additionally, there are multiple brooches that have been given as gifts to Queen Elizabeth or her predecessors by various countries, and which she has subsequently worn — you guessed it — while attending state functions hosted by those countries. Thus, it has become generally accepted among jewel watchers that the queen frequently uses her jewels to indicate loyalty and friendship between the UK and other nations.
Hence the great attention being paid to the brooches she wore during Trump’s visit.
Queen Elizabeth wore three brooches during Trump’s visit. She donned the first one on the day of his arrival, at the height of the publicity surrounding his appearance as well as the height of the controversy.
The brooch in question is colloquially known as the “American state visit brooch.” That’s not an official name — it was made up by the author of the Queen’s Jewel Vault blog (which SamuraiKnitter cites many times throughout her Twitter thread). The media seems to have run with it anyway, perhaps because up until now, very few people outside these royal fashion fans were keeping a close eye on what jewels the queen wore.
The so-called “American state visit brooch” is an antique gift, made in the US in the 1950s in and given to the queen by the Obamas during an official state visit to the UK in 2011.
The so-called “American state visit brooch,” which the Obamas gave the queen. Queen’s Jewel Vault
Small and relatively unassuming, the flower made of gold, diamonds, and agate attracted little attention at first. But when sharp-eyed observers realized the queen was wearing a gift from Trump’s most prominent political enemy, tongues started wagging.
The US has given QE jewelry before over the years and I bet her dresser could put hands on any and all of it given five minutes. But she chose the most SENTIMENTAL piece in the collection, the one that was given OUT OF FRIENDSHIP WITH THE OBAMAS AS PEOPLE.
— Bitch. STILL my superhero name. (@SamuraiKnitter) July 15, 2018
Next up: day two of Trump’s visit, during which he sat down with England’s prime minister at a state banquet that was notably not hosted at Buckingham Palace and was unattended by Queen Elizabeth, in contrast to her treatment of the Obamas. Throughout the day, Elizabeth wore a gift presented to her by the governor general of Canada in 2017.
Queen Elizabeth wore the Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch on July 14 while meeting the king and queen of Belgium. Getty Images; Queen’s Jewel Vault
It’s the Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch, and it was given to commemorate her 65 years on the throne. But to SamuraiKnitter, Queen Elizabeth’s choice to wear it during Trump’s visit was an in-your-face demonstration of loyalty to a country Trump has had serious issues with of late:
It’s called the Sapphire Jubillee Brooch, and it was given to the Queen of England as a gift for ruling for eleventy billion (okay, 65). From Canada. You know, who Trump’s been screaming about and insulting. The commonwealth country and one of the UK’s greatest allies. Them.
— Bitch. STILL my superhero name. (@SamuraiKnitter) July 15, 2018
If all that sounds pretty baller, it arguably gets better.
For the last occasion — the awkward moment when the ruler of the British Commonwealth stood around waiting for nearly 15 minutes to meet Trump — the queen wore an un-ostentatious diamond teardrop brooch.
Getty Images
The brooch was a gift passed down to her by her mother, who wore it during the 1952 state funeral for her husband, King George VI (Queen Elizabeth’s father). It appears prominently in the famous “Three Queens” photo from the occasion.
Jewel watchers nearly died, because it is the brooch worn in the famous “Three Queens in Mourning” photo, worn by the Queen Mum: pic.twitter.com/3xS2C56Xcj
— Bitch. STILL my superhero name. (@SamuraiKnitter) July 15, 2018
Of course, it’s impossible to know for certain that the queen intended to send the message that dining with Trump was the social equivalent of attending her father’s funeral — or, just to toss out another metaphorical possibility, that Trump’s presidency represents the symbolic death of the American experiment.
But either way, Trump detractors seem to be delighted by the idea of Queen Elizabeth supporting the #resistance with bosom gemstones.
“The irony to all this,” SamuraiKnitter told Vox, “is I don’t actually pay that much attention to brooches. I like the tiaras.”
And even though jewel watchers can only speculate over the queen’s intended brooch symbolism during Trump’s visit, the popularity of the discussion has made it overwhelmingly clear that there is a growing audience for those seeking confirmation of their political opinions in even the most unexpected places.
We look forward to discovering what sort of coded shade her majesty might be tossing the next time she breaks out the Burmese Ruby.
Original Source -> “Brooch warfare,” explained: what Queen Elizabeth’s jewels might be saying about Trump
via The Conservative Brief
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the-jewel-catalogue · 2 months
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Do you have any favorite or least favorite diplomatic/symbolic jewelry pieces?
I don't know if we would class this as diplomatic/symbolic jewels but this is my least favourite.
CJ - The then Duchess of Cambridge was gifted this brooch by Canada.
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J & CJ - My favourite has to be the Canadian Snowflake brooch gifted to the late Queen Elizabeth for her Sapphire Jubilee, it’s so pretty!
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J - I don’t know if my least favourite counts but it’s sort of symbolic, just not diplomatic but it has to be the Dacre brooch that the Princess of Wales was presented with when she took over as Honorary Air Commandant. I hate it so much, it’s so awful!!
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europesroyalsjewels · 6 years
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Canadian Sapphire Snowflake Brooch ♕ Queen Elizabeth II
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europesroyalsjewels · 6 years
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Canadian Sapphire Snowflake Brooch ♕ Official Gift - State Property, Currently worn by Queen Elizabeth II 
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europesroyalsjewels · 6 years
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Canadian Sapphire Snowflake Brooch ♕ Official Gift - State Property, Currently worn by Queen Elizabeth II 
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