#tiffanyeveryday
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#Repost @tiffanyandco ... From our campaign archives. A shot of Tiffany Home & Accessories by @roeethridge. #TiffanyEveryday ——— In hopes of bringing some joy and optimism to your feed, we’re looking back on a few of our favorite moments. We believe positivity is needed, now more than ever. #TiffanyAndCo (at Durham, North Carolina) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_PdiuzH8_P/?igshid=4nfkjoqjmyh
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#Repost @tiffanyandco with @make_repost ・・・ From our campaign archives. Tiffany Home & Accessories and #TiffanyPaperFlowers shot by @grantcornett for our spring 2018 campaign. #TiffanyEveryDay ——— In hopes of bringing some joy and optimism to your feed, we’re looking back on a few of our favorite moments. We believe positivity is needed, now more than ever. #TiffanyAndCo https://www.instagram.com/p/B_LAnVrgo3d/?igshid=k3st18vyb9la
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Nothing more beautiful than #Tiffany luggage stacked prophesying our incredible adventure ahead. #staytuned #tiffanyeveryday #shopping #travel #nyc #newyork #5thavenue #madison #breakfastattiffanys #orientexpress #transsiberianexpress (at Tiffany & Co.)
#5thavenue#staytuned#orientexpress#newyork#travel#nyc#breakfastattiffanys#madison#tiffanyeveryday#transsiberianexpress#tiffany#shopping
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Nu este o surpriză faptul că o companie precum Tiffany and Co. (www.tiffany.com) are o viziune total diferită despre ceea ce înseamnă “Obiectele de zi cu zi”, dovezile asupra acestei abordări regăsindu-se în nouă colecție de sezon. Printre piesele acestei colecții regăsim și un obiect unic – un cuib de pasăre realizat din fire de argint țesute împreună. În interiorul cuibului regăsim trei ouă din porțelan albastru Tiffany. #design #TiffanyEveryDay #tiffanyandco #AllYouNeed #thegentl
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A minimal moment . . . . . #mobilephotography #tiffanyandco #tiffany #tiffanyeveryday #sky @vogue @tiffanyandco @voguejapan @microsoft @photoshop @lightroom @huaweimobile @apple (Fukuoka Prefecture) https://www.instagram.com/p/ByFJfCzHvWb/?igshid=3z2oeuisti28
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Do you think Kobe & Marlee need these?? ��️ ・・・ Pup not included. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. 📷: @roeethridge. #Repost @tiffanyandco
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@Regrann from @tiffanyandco - Keep paddling. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday - #regrann
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The four images are just a few of Tiffany & Co.'s new Everyday Objects. Ordinary items made is sterling silver, Tiffany blue enamel and wood. Learn about the entire collection on If It's Hip It's Here today (link in bio) #tiffanyandco #tiffany #tiffanyeverydayobjects #luxurygifts #luxury #luxuryitems #deskaccessories #tableware #housewares #householdobjects #sterlingsilver #tiffanyblue #enamel #tiffanynco #tiffanygifts #giftguide #giftideas #tiffanyeveryday #ifitshipitshere
#tiffanyandco#tiffany#giftguide#enamel#tiffanyeverydayobjects#tiffanygifts#tableware#luxuryitems#sterlingsilver#householdobjects#tiffanynco#tiffanyblue#tiffanyeveryday#ifitshipitshere#giftideas#luxury#housewares#deskaccessories#luxurygifts
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https://www.shutterstock.com/tr/g/Feryalsurel #fashiontrends #rabeccahall #annawintour #dglove #designwalks #fendilovesprintemps #printemsoffical #fendicharm #strapyou #FundFair #WGSNFUTURES #clipstudiopaint #manga #TiffanyEveryDay #LVxKoons #ALWAYSLEARNING #metalizados #dglovespalermo #essential #tbt #tbtphoto #webstagram #statigram #dglovesnaples #mtlcafecrawl #dglovesjapan #DGHarrods #DGLovesLondon #DGMillennials #netaporter #
#fundfair#webstagram#annawintour#rabeccahall#tbtphoto#tbt#tiffanyeveryday#dgharrods#dglovespalermo#designwalks#lvxkoons#clipstudiopaint#printemsoffical#alwayslearning#essential#dgmillennials#fashiontrends#wgsnfutures#mtlcafecrawl#dglovesnaples#metalizados#dglove#fendicharm#dgloveslondon#statigram#dglovesjapan#manga#fendilovesprintemps#netaporter#strapyou
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Tongue in Chic: Tiffany’s $1,000 Tin Can to Moschino’s $735 Plastic Bag
Tiffany & Co.—#81 on Interbrand’s Best Global Brands list of the world’s most valuable brands—has been considered a bastion of luxury goods for 180 years, purveyor of all things elegant in jewelry, sterling silver, china, crystal, stationery, fragrances, water bottles, watches, personal accessories and leather goods. Some may wonder if it’s tired of being an arbiter of taste and style with its latest collection.
Its exorbitantly-priced new home goods collection by creative director Reed Krakoff, Everyday Objects, elevates those objects to ridiculous heights and price: a $1,000 sterling silver tin can, a $9,000 sterling silver ball of yarn (one of only five made), a $425 walnut and silver protractor for the math whiz in the family (complete the set with the matching $400 triangle and $450 ruler), a $385 harmonica, a $1,500 set of 10 LEGO-like walnut and silver building blocks, $650 table tennis paddles, a $950 “paper plate” and $95 pair of bone china “paper cups” and a $300 yo-yo for all ages. At least there’s free shipping and returns on each order.
Tiffany said the collection “transforms utilitarian items into handcrafted works of art.” Krakoff, Tiffany’s chief artistic officer, added to the Guardian that “What makes the collection unique is that it incorporates the best quality, craftsmanship and design with a level of functionality that allows you to use these things every day.”
Introducing The Silver Cup Project, featuring our sterling silver coffee cup from the new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Nov 1, 2017 at 8:37am PDT
Released in time for the holiday shopping season and year-end gift-giving, one rationalization is Everyday Objects is a PR stunt to draw attention away from declining sales, its version of the famed Neiman Marcus Christmas Book which has included pricey, elaborate items as much to fantasize about as to purchase.
No hands. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 3:08pm PDT
Tiffany’s Everyday Object collection (brought to life by artist Christoph Niemann on its Instagram and Twitter feeds) is explained on its website as, “Beautiful things shouldn’t just live in a drawer. Handcrafted in sterling silver, enamel and wood, this new collection elevates traditional office supplies and accessories into works of art meant to become favorite pieces you use every day.”
$TIF has $250 Crazy Straws as part of their “Everyday objects” collection. (Ht @Banker_L83 ) https://t.co/9rdta9TAHL http://pic.twitter.com/5b0u4WJRkZ
— Jeff Macke (@JeffMacke) November 8, 2017
Derek Conrad, a company spokesman, told TODAY, “While there are certainly extraordinary items at elevated price points, the vast majority of products in the collection are actually under $500.” (Bargain!)
Keep paddling. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 11:24am PDT
Krakoff, who joined Tiffany in January, told The New York Times, “The main thing we were trying to bring back was that aesthetic of the extraordinary as well as the everyday. We’re just getting started.”
Something blue. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. : @roeethridge
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 26, 2017 at 3:03pm PDT
Tiffany & Co. has been getting hipper of late, and a little more Burberry-esque with the musicians (such as Annie Clark, aka Saint Vincent) and other hipsters featured in its recent “Iconoclasts” campaign.
youtube
Its Manhattan flagship has been remodeled to make space for the new home collection, with the New York flagship store divided into semi-enclosed sections, each with unique furnishings and décor and ampersands to suggest this is a sidecar to the Tiffany & Co. brand, as the New York Times noted this week.
Can you hear that sound? Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 25, 2017 at 3:00pm PDT
“The first thing the team and I wanted to accomplish was to create a space that could’ve been part of Tiffany history,” Krakoff told the Times. “To take this neoclassical interior, bright and light and simple, and juxtapose that with surprise, modernity and the unexpected. One of the fundamental goals of this floor is to bring the magic and extraordinary creativity of the Tiffany window into the store itself. Think of the windows of Gene Moore in the ’60s that juxtaposed a toy steam shovel with a pile of sand and an extraordinary diamond in a Tiffany setting. I wanted to be sure to capture that spirit, of an offhanded luxury.”
Start the day with a touch of Tiffany Blue®. #TiffanyEveryDay http://pic.twitter.com/gM0iLScCFI
— Tiffany & Co. (@TiffanyAndCo) October 26, 2017
Tiffany’s signature ro
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Pup not included. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay 📷: @roeethridge #Regram via @tiffanyandco — view on Instagram http://ift.tt/2C64kpH
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Tongue in Chic: Tiffany’s $1,000 Tin Can to Moschino’s $735 Plastic Bag
Tiffany & Co.—#81 on Interbrand’s Best Global Brands list of the world’s most valuable brands—has been considered a bastion of luxury goods for 180 years, purveyor of all things elegant in jewelry, sterling silver, china, crystal, stationery, fragrances, water bottles, watches, personal accessories and leather goods. Some may wonder if it’s tired of being an arbiter of taste and style with its latest collection.
Its exorbitantly-priced new home goods collection by creative director Reed Krakoff, Everyday Objects, elevates those objects to ridiculous heights and price: a $1,000 sterling silver tin can, a $9,000 sterling silver ball of yarn (one of only five made), a $425 walnut and silver protractor for the math whiz in the family (complete the set with the matching $400 triangle and $450 ruler), a $385 harmonica, a $1,500 set of 10 LEGO-like walnut and silver building blocks, $650 table tennis paddles, a $950 “paper plate” and $95 pair of bone china “paper cups” and a $300 yo-yo for all ages. At least there’s free shipping and returns on each order.
Tiffany said the collection “transforms utilitarian items into handcrafted works of art.” Krakoff, Tiffany’s chief artistic officer, added to the Guardian that “What makes the collection unique is that it incorporates the best quality, craftsmanship and design with a level of functionality that allows you to use these things every day.”
Introducing The Silver Cup Project, featuring our sterling silver coffee cup from the new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Nov 1, 2017 at 8:37am PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
Released in time for the holiday shopping season and year-end gift-giving, one rationalization is Everyday Objects is a PR stunt to draw attention away from declining sales, its version of the famed Neiman Marcus Christmas Book which has included pricey, elaborate items as much to fantasize about as to purchase.
No hands. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 3:08pm PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
Tiffany’s Everyday Object collection (brought to life by artist Christoph Niemann on its Instagram and Twitter feeds) is explained on its website as, “Beautiful things shouldn’t just live in a drawer. Handcrafted in sterling silver, enamel and wood, this new collection elevates traditional office supplies and accessories into works of art meant to become favorite pieces you use every day.”
$TIF has $250 Crazy Straws as part of their “Everyday objects” collection. (Ht @Banker_L83 ) https://t.co/9rdta9TAHL pic.twitter.com/5b0u4WJRkZ
— Jeff Macke (@JeffMacke) November 8, 2017
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
Derek Conrad, a company spokesman, told TODAY, “While there are certainly extraordinary items at elevated price points, the vast majority of products in the collection are actually under $500.” (Bargain!)
Keep paddling. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 11:24am PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
Krakoff, who joined Tiffany in January, told The New York Times, “The main thing we were trying to bring back was that aesthetic of the extraordinary as well as the everyday. We’re just getting started.”
Something blue. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. : @roeethridge
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 26, 2017 at 3:03pm PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
Tiffany & Co. has been getting hipper of late, and a little more Burberry-esque with the musicians (such as Annie Clark, aka Saint Vincent) and other hipsters featured in its recent “Iconoclasts” campaign.
youtube
Its Manhattan flagship has been remodeled to make space for the new home collection, with the New York flagship store divided into semi-enclosed sections, each with unique furnishings and décor and ampersands to suggest this is a sidecar to the Tiffany & Co. brand, as the New York Times noted this week.
Can you hear that sound? Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 25, 2017 at 3:00pm PDT
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
“The first thing the team and I wanted to accomplish was to create a space that could’ve been part of Tiffany history,” Krakoff told the Times. “To take this neoclassical interior, bright and light and simple, and juxtapose that with surprise, modernity and the unexpected. One of the fundamental goals of this floor is to bring the magic and extraordinary creativity of the Tiffany window into the store itself. Think of the windows of Gene Moore in the ’60s that juxtaposed a toy steam shovel with a pile of sand and an extraordinary diamond in a Tiffany setting. I wanted to be sure to capture that spirit, of an offhanded luxury.”
Start the day with a touch of Tiffany Blue®. #TiffanyEveryDay pic.twitter.com/gM0iLScCFI
— Tiffany & Co. (@TiffanyAndCo) October 26, 2017
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
Tiffany’s signature ro
from WordPress https://glenmenlow.wordpress.com/2017/11/08/tongue-in-chic-tiffanys-1000-tin-can-to-moschinos-735-plastic-bag/ via IFTTT
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#Repost @tiffanyandco with @make_repost ・・・ From our campaign archives. Diamonds, gemstones and Tiffany Home & Accessories shot by @grantcornett. #TiffanyEveryDay ——— In hopes of bringing some joy and optimism to your feed, we’re looking back on a few of our favorite moments. We believe positivity is needed, now more than ever. #TiffanyAndCo ——— All care was taken to ensure the well-being of the animals featured in these images. https://www.instagram.com/p/B-5IAb0gJsx/?igshid=cecb2lv7rbso
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Text
Tongue in Chic: Tiffany’s $1,000 Tin Can to Moschino’s $735 Plastic Bag
Tiffany & Co.—#81 on Interbrand’s Best Global Brands list of the world’s most valuable brands—has been considered a bastion of luxury goods for 180 years, purveyor of all things elegant in jewelry, sterling silver, china, crystal, stationery, fragrances, water bottles, watches, personal accessories and leather goods. Some may wonder if it’s tired of being an arbiter of taste and style with its latest collection.
Its exorbitantly-priced new home goods collection by creative director Reed Krakoff, Everyday Objects, elevates those objects to ridiculous heights and price: a $1,000 sterling silver tin can, a $9,000 sterling silver ball of yarn (one of only five made), a $425 walnut and silver protractor for the math whiz in the family (complete the set with the matching $400 triangle and $450 ruler), a $385 harmonica, a $1,500 set of 10 LEGO-like walnut and silver building blocks, $650 table tennis paddles, a $950 “paper plate” and $95 pair of bone china “paper cups” and a $300 yo-yo for all ages. At least there’s free shipping and returns on each order.
Tiffany said the collection “transforms utilitarian items into handcrafted works of art.” Krakoff, Tiffany’s chief artistic officer, added to the Guardian that “What makes the collection unique is that it incorporates the best quality, craftsmanship and design with a level of functionality that allows you to use these things every day.”
Introducing The Silver Cup Project, featuring our sterling silver coffee cup from the new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Nov 1, 2017 at 8:37am PDT
Released in time for the holiday shopping season and year-end gift-giving, one rationalization is Everyday Objects is a PR stunt to draw attention away from declining sales, its version of the famed Neiman Marcus Christmas Book which has included pricey, elaborate items as much to fantasize about as to purchase.
No hands. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 3:08pm PDT
Tiffany’s Everyday Object collection (brought to life by artist Christoph Niemann on its Instagram and Twitter feeds) is explained on its website as, “Beautiful things shouldn’t just live in a drawer. Handcrafted in sterling silver, enamel and wood, this new collection elevates traditional office supplies and accessories into works of art meant to become favorite pieces you use every day.”
$TIF has $250 Crazy Straws as part of their “Everyday objects” collection. (Ht @Banker_L83 ) https://t.co/9rdta9TAHL pic.twitter.com/5b0u4WJRkZ
— Jeff Macke (@JeffMacke) November 8, 2017
Derek Conrad, a company spokesman, told TODAY, “While there are certainly extraordinary items at elevated price points, the vast majority of products in the collection are actually under $500.” (Bargain!)
Keep paddling. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 11:24am PDT
Krakoff, who joined Tiffany in January, told The New York Times, “The main thing we were trying to bring back was that aesthetic of the extraordinary as well as the everyday. We’re just getting started.”
Something blue. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. : @roeethridge
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 26, 2017 at 3:03pm PDT
Tiffany & Co. has been getting hipper of late, and a little more Burberry-esque with the musicians (such as Annie Clark, aka Saint Vincent) and other hipsters featured in its recent “Iconoclasts” campaign.
youtube
Its Manhattan flagship has been remodeled to make space for the new home collection, with the New York flagship store divided into semi-enclosed sections, each with unique furnishings and décor and ampersands to suggest this is a sidecar to the Tiffany & Co. brand, as the New York Times noted this week.
Can you hear that sound? Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 25, 2017 at 3:00pm PDT
“The first thing the team and I wanted to accomplish was to create a space that could’ve been part of Tiffany history,” Krakoff told the Times. “To take this neoclassical interior, bright and light and simple, and juxtapose that with surprise, modernity and the unexpected. One of the fundamental goals of this floor is to bring the magic and extraordinary creativity of the Tiffany window into the store itself. Think of the windows of Gene Moore in the ’60s that juxtaposed a toy steam shovel with a pile of sand and an extraordinary diamond in a Tiffany setting. I wanted to be sure to capture that spirit, of an offhanded luxury.”
Start the day with a touch of Tiffany Blue®. #TiffanyEveryDay pic.twitter.com/gM0iLScCFI
— Tiffany & Co. (@TiffanyAndCo) October 26, 2017
Tiffany’s signature ro
0 notes
Text
Tongue in Chic: Tiffany’s $1,000 Tin Can to Moschino’s $735 Plastic Bag
Tiffany & Co.—#81 on Interbrand’s Best Global Brands list of the world’s most valuable brands—has been considered a bastion of luxury goods for 180 years, purveyor of all things elegant in jewelry, sterling silver, china, crystal, stationery, fragrances, water bottles, watches, personal accessories and leather goods. Some may wonder if it’s tired of being an arbiter of taste and style with its latest collection.
Its exorbitantly-priced new home goods collection by creative director Reed Krakoff, Everyday Objects, elevates those objects to ridiculous heights and price: a $1,000 sterling silver tin can, a $9,000 sterling silver ball of yarn (one of only five made), a $425 walnut and silver protractor for the math whiz in the family (complete the set with the matching $400 triangle and $450 ruler), a $385 harmonica, a $1,500 set of 10 LEGO-like walnut and silver building blocks, $650 table tennis paddles, a $950 “paper plate” and $95 pair of bone china “paper cups” and a $300 yo-yo for all ages. At least there’s free shipping and returns on each order.
Tiffany said the collection “transforms utilitarian items into handcrafted works of art.” Krakoff, Tiffany’s chief artistic officer, added to the Guardian that “What makes the collection unique is that it incorporates the best quality, craftsmanship and design with a level of functionality that allows you to use these things every day.”
Introducing The Silver Cup Project, featuring our sterling silver coffee cup from the new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Nov 1, 2017 at 8:37am PDT
Released in time for the holiday shopping season and year-end gift-giving, one rationalization is Everyday Objects is a PR stunt to draw attention away from declining sales, its version of the famed Neiman Marcus Christmas Book which has included pricey, elaborate items as much to fantasize about as to purchase.
No hands. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday #TiffanyEveryDay
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 3:08pm PDT
Tiffany’s Everyday Object collection (brought to life by artist Christoph Niemann on its Instagram and Twitter feeds) is explained on its website as, “Beautiful things shouldn’t just live in a drawer. Handcrafted in sterling silver, enamel and wood, this new collection elevates traditional office supplies and accessories into works of art meant to become favorite pieces you use every day.”
$TIF has $250 Crazy Straws as part of their “Everyday objects” collection. (Ht @Banker_L83 ) https://t.co/9rdta9TAHL http://pic.twitter.com/5b0u4WJRkZ
— Jeff Macke (@JeffMacke) November 8, 2017
Derek Conrad, a company spokesman, told TODAY, “While there are certainly extraordinary items at elevated price points, the vast majority of products in the collection are actually under $500.” (Bargain!)
Keep paddling. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 31, 2017 at 11:24am PDT
Krakoff, who joined Tiffany in January, told The New York Times, “The main thing we were trying to bring back was that aesthetic of the extraordinary as well as the everyday. We’re just getting started.”
Something blue. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. : @roeethridge
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 26, 2017 at 3:03pm PDT
Tiffany & Co. has been getting hipper of late, and a little more Burberry-esque with the musicians (such as Annie Clark, aka Saint Vincent) and other hipsters featured in its recent “Iconoclasts” campaign.
youtube
Its Manhattan flagship has been remodeled to make space for the new home collection, with the New York flagship store divided into semi-enclosed sections, each with unique furnishings and décor and ampersands to suggest this is a sidecar to the Tiffany & Co. brand, as the New York Times noted this week.
Can you hear that sound? Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday
A post shared by Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) on Oct 25, 2017 at 3:00pm PDT
“The first thing the team and I wanted to accomplish was to create a space that could’ve been part of Tiffany history,” Krakoff told the Times. “To take this neoclassical interior, bright and light and simple, and juxtapose that with surprise, modernity and the unexpected. One of the fundamental goals of this floor is to bring the magic and extraordinary creativity of the Tiffany window into the store itself. Think of the windows of Gene Moore in the ’60s that juxtaposed a toy steam shovel with a pile of sand and an extraordinary diamond in a Tiffany setting. I wanted to be sure to capture that spirit, of an offhanded luxury.”
Start the day with a touch of Tiffany Blue®. #TiffanyEveryDay http://pic.twitter.com/gM0iLScCFI
— Tiffany & Co. (@TiffanyAndCo) October 26, 2017
Tiffany’s signature ro
0 notes
Video
@Regrann from @tiffanyandco - Hold that thought. Introducing our new Home & Accessories collection. #TiffanyEveryDay Shop the link in our bio. Artwork: Christoph Niemann @abstractsunday - #regrann
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