Bulgari and Serpenti: intertwined destinies

Bulgari and Serpenti: intertwined destinies

STORY

March 2022
From Finissimo to Piccolissimo: with its recently gained expertise in ultra-thin calibres, the Roman brand is inserting miniaturised mechanics (1.30 grams!) (…)

“Nothing is permanent. Why do we expect jewels to be permanent?”

“Nothing is permanent. Why do we expect jewels to be permanent?”

INTERVIEW

January 2022
Studio Renn, a collective founded in 2018 in Mumbai, creates jewellery that might be better described as “wearable sculpture”. The two founders presented (…)

GemGenève, the success of the wonderfair

GemGenève, the success of the wonderfair

INTERVIEW

January 2022
The third edition of the Geneva show dedicated to precious stones and fine jewellery ended on a more than positive note. With 120 exhibitors and 2,757 (…)

Watchmaking in search of eternity

Watchmaking in search of eternity

ANALYSIS

March 2021
While mechanical watchmaking – the existence of which dates back not millennia but “merely” a few centuries – could conceivably one day dwindle and die out, (…)

Ulysse Nardin ventures into jewellery watchmaking

Ulysse Nardin ventures into jewellery watchmaking

March 2021
Diamonds, diamonds, and more diamonds... With the Sparkling Free Wheel, Ulysse Nardin launches a “ray of light into the stratosphere” with a masterpiece (…)

Watchmaking and jewellery: intertwining of destinies

Watchmaking and jewellery: intertwining of destinies

MEETING ISABELLE CERBONESCHI

March 2021
Some jewellers have become watchmakers, while other houses, in rares cases, have taken the opposite path. Isabelle Cerboneschi, who has a deep understanding (…)

Jacob & Co.: Jewels & Complications

Jacob & Co.: Jewels & Complications

INTERVIEW

March 2021
Maybe more than any other name in the industry, Jacob & Co has pushed the opulent mix of gems and complicated mechanisms. Even with the pandemic crisis, (…)

Learning from jewellery's successes

Learning from jewellery’s successes

EDITORIAL

March 2021
In what is still a highly fragmented sector, where “no-name” brands dominate, the jewellery heavyweights – Cartier, Tiffany & Co., Bulgari and Van Cleef (…)

“Jewellery will continue to outperform”

“Jewellery will continue to outperform”

INTERVIEW

March 2021
In the wake of LVMH’s takeover of Tiffany & Co., the largest transaction in the history of luxury, we wanted to learn more about the dynamics of the (…)

“Jewellery is based on gut feeling”

“Jewellery is based on gut feeling”

INTERVIEW

March 2021
Bulgari presents a rare example of a historical jeweller that has today become a fully-fledged watchmaker. It is master of its own in-house movements, and (…)

Building a gemstone super-expert

Building a gemstone super-expert

R&D

March 2021
Far greater volumes of gemstones, evaluated automatically? This is the promise offered by Swiss jewellery house Gübelin, which has joined forces with CSEM (…)

Richard Mille: breakthrough in jewellery watchmaking

Richard Mille: breakthrough in jewellery watchmaking

March 2021
The brand whose first model was born in 2001 has reached a time of generational transition. Cécile Guenat has already asserted herself as head of creation (…)