Archive for July, 2009

Don’t Buy Tiffany On eBay Until You’ve Seen This

SCROLL DOWN FOR PICTURES. I’m going to show you what Fake versus Real looks like.

I won an auction for a Tiffany bracelet. But before I even bid, I emailed the seller, asking her if this was authentic, even though in the auction details, she stated that it was.

I know there are A LOT of fakes on eBay, but with 100% feedback from 65 people, I thought they were legitimate.

I was wrong.

Anyone who’s bought/received Tiffany ’s jewelry from Tiffany’s website KNOWS what to expect in the mail. A heavy polishing cloth/carrying case, a turquoise box, and an authentic piece.

I knew IMMEDIATELY when I opened the box that I had been duped. The lime green box had Tiffany & Co. smudged on top. The polishing cloth/carrying case was hollow inside and made of some hardened material. Again, the logo was printed and smudged. To make it worse, the bracelet didn’t even say Tiffany & Co.

I contacted the seller, and she denied it was a fake. Owning several rings and bracelets, I know what Tiffany jewelry is supposed to look like. She refused a refund, and I was out $80.00!!!

Apparently this seller bought a fake box (lime green!)and cleaning cloth/carrying case off of eBay - and was passing off a fake bracelet as authentic.

I contacted PayPal - they asked that I return the package to her so that my refund was processed. I did exactly that, and added delivery confirmation to “cover myself”. She then tells PayPal the package was empty, and no ring was shipped back. I contacted eBay, and thought they would cancel the auction, absolving me from responsibility. I was wrong again. I had already paid and received the bracelet so I was basically stuck with a fake bracelet and nothing else.

I was out $80.00 PLUS $4.00 to ship the item back. The seller received the bracelet & my money.

Be sure to read all of the fine print of a auction. She stated at the bottom of the auction that the buyer had to pay for shipping it back!! I buy something I think is authentic, and when I find out it’s not, I’m out the return shipping charges!!!

As Buyer, you must protect yourself.

While there are some people selling their Tiffany & Co. jewelry, be careful. You could end up with a fake peice like I did, and have to pay to ship it back, and STILL not get refunded.

I’m going to show you what real Tiffany & Co. looks like versus a fake. If this is helpful to you, please mark “yes”.

First box is real - second box is fake

Close-up of fake. Notice the string & how large the logo is.

Real. See how the string & logo are smaller?

Real. Inside the polishing cloth/carrying case. It’s made like this so you can leave your jewelry inside to polish.

Fake.

Hope this helps you. Ask the seller to send you a picture of the inside of the polishing cloth-you’ll know immediately!

If you’re a dedicated follower of tiffany jewelry like me. Don’t miss the tiffany jewelry shop on line including pendants, necklace, earrings, bracelets, etc.

If You are in the United Kindom, You Can alos Visit: www.TiffanyWorld.co.uk to choose Tiffany jewellery with high quality.

Tiffany designer’s glass studio work

Acentury has passed since the Paris World’s Fair of 1900 when Peter Carl Fabergé, Louis Comfort Tiffany and René Lalique introduced their decorative objects to a world enthralled by Art Nouveau.

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Fabergé eggs, Lalique’s sculptures of women turning into butterflies and lamps by Tiffany whose shades were masterpieces of handmade glass were fantastic then.

They are even more prized now that such time-consuming craftsmanship is almost unimaginable and the work from that era – now true antiques – have become immensely valuable.

But not untouchable.

And that’s not because the Legion of Honor in San Francisco is exhibiting the works of the three decorators, but because Alan Schneider, owner of Antique Traders, has the biggest collection of Tiffany glassware west of the Mississippi River.

You can touch them. And he doesn’t charge admission.

He doesn’t expect you to buy anything, either, especially because the cheapest Tiffany lamp in the store is $9,000.

“If, during the three months of the show, I get 200 people to come here, even if they don’t buy anything, but they appreciate everything, that does it for me,” he said. “It’s a feather in my cap.”

Schneider is just totally in love with Art Nouveau decorative art, and his shop on California Street and Fifth Avenue is a museum of the period. “This is a lifetime of collecting,” he said. “Thirty-eight years.”

A native San Franciscan, Schneider knew nothing about art before traveling to Europe in 1970. He had been working in insurance, but he brought home a few antique pieces and opened shop. He slowly became enthralled with the natural themes and femininity of the Art Nouveau motifs.

He started investing in Handel and Pairpoint lamps, American-made lamps from the period that used a reverse painting technique on the inside of shades that were stunning when lit.

“I could buy them for $500 and $1,000, and they were like Tiffanies,” he said.

About 20 years ago, he bought his first Tiffany for about $5,000 and began to collect them at a rapid pace. In the past two years, he doubled his collection of lamps – he has about 45 at an average value of $85,000 each – and Favrile glassware – accessory pieces such as vases, goblets, plates, candlesticks and desk items – which number about 150 and are worth from $350 to $20,000 apiece.

Schneider says the Legion of Honor show includes three stunning lamps – a peacock, a butterfly and a wisteria – but the rest are so-so.

“Knowing Tiffany, it’s not the best I have seen,” he said.

Masterpieces

After years of looking at the New York designer’s glass studio work, Schneider is certain when he’s seen a masterpiece emerge from a field of top-quality pieces.

His $100,000-plus peony is one such piece, done on the particular artist’s good day.

“It’s multicolored. They were all well done, but the glass they used in this one is mottled. There is great differentiation between the colors they used in the way the sheets of glass were put together,” he said. “It’s incredible.”

Schneider can carry on exuberantly about most everything in his store, three rooms in 1,400 square feet that are fairly stuffed with treasures from the Art Nouveau period of 1880 to 1920.

Impressive inventory

His inventory of lamps and glassware includes Duffner and Kimberly, Handel, Pairpoint, Bradley and Hubbard, Moe Bridges, Classique and the French studios of Daum Nancy and Émile Gallé, including several of the artist’s signature layered glass with cutaway designs.

Schneider’s collection of stained and beveled glass windows comes from many sources – but no churches, he says – and is among the largest in the country.

He has three Tiffany windows, including one of a woman in a Grecian gown gazing out of a grove of trees as she draws water from a fountain.

To Schneider, the scene is realistic despite its obvious formal abstraction, and it’s a quality he says Tiffany gave to every piece of glass composition that had a natural theme.

Whether depicting a tulip, peony, daffodil, dogwood or pomegranate on a shade, the copper and leaded edges of the glass were curved, Schneider noted, “not jagged, like in a reproduction.”

Though the notion of a Tiffany lamp is well known from the heavy production of copies in the 1970s for family rec rooms and fern bars, eyeing the real thing is a different experience.

Subtle colors

Besides the subtlety in shaping the pattern outlines, there’s the way Tiffany graduated the color scheme on a single lamp shade.

“People don’t even realize how good this is,” Schneider said as he caressed the shade of a 16-inch geometric patterned shade with heavily mottled, dicrolic glass. “Look how it goes from a mustard blue to a lighter blue to a lot more blue to total blue.”

All Tiffany lamps have decorative bronze bases that are artistic tour-de-forces as well. “I will switch shades and bases sometimes. Some lamps went with bases, but you could also choose shade to go with a base. They (Tiffany) had a studio and people could say I want that and that.”

Schneider’s collection of Tiffany lamps includes turtlebacks, the large chunks of glass that resemble a turtle’s shell; damascenes, with blown-glass shades that exude a marbleized or flowing water pattern; and the draped stained-glass shades called linen fold.

His large collection of Favrile pieces exhibits another part of Tiffany artistry: the ability to blow design patterns into the glass piece.

Schneider has one locked case from which he pulls out one after another – a pedestal compote dish with a wide ridged edge in tones of blue, cream and peach, or an 8-inch oval vase with leaves and vines swirling around it in greens and golds, iridescent with a satin finish. “It cost $20 when it was made,” Schneider said. “Now, it’s worth $9,000.”

And to top it off, Schneider boasts possession of one of the most valuable Tiffanies around: a blue jack-in-the-pulpit vase, considered one of the designer’s most distinct sculptural pieces. “There’s only one other in the country,” he said. “They are extremely rare.”

Schneider has advertised his store widely in all the proper journals and hopes to sell about half of his stock to serious collectors during the course of the Legion of Honor show. And that’s why it’s a good idea to check out his Tiffanies now. A second chance may never come again.

“The people that come in to buy, they will want a piece of history,” he said, “especially because of the economy. They are a major investment. I cannot foresee the future, but in 20 years, they will double or triple in value.”

Silver into fine shimmering Tiffany chains

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Tiffanys Silver Jewelry for Summer

Renowned for sculpting silver into stylish designs of lustrous simplicity, Elsa Peretti now utilizes the precious metal in a new fashion statement. As she puts it, “My dream for silver has finally come true.” With her affinity for the sleek and sensuous, she neatly translates silver into fine shimmering chains with bezel-set stones, the classic elements of Diamonds by the Yard® that forever changed the role of diamonds in fashion.

The collection’s seamless necklaces in varied lengths, long sprinkle necklaces with exquisite stones scattered at random intervals, drop earrings and bracelets gleam with a cool elegance and dazzle brilliantly in the summer sun. Their sheer beauty layers with ease, making a statement without adding weight. One exquisite strand or many, Diamonds by the Yard® lights up summer and beyond with the dazzling effects of a great modern design.

The Elsa Peretti® Diamonds by the Yard® collection in sterling silver starts at $395 and is available at select Tiffany & Co. locations worldwide.

TIFFANY & CO. and TIFFANY are trademarks of Tiffany and Company.
ELSA PERETTI and DIAMONDS BY THE YARD are trademarks of Elsa Peretti.

Artical From:

http://www.tiffanyjewelleryshop.co.uk/

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No coral jewelry at any Tiffany store

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(NBC)- You won’t see coral jewelry on the shelves at any Tiffany Jewelry store.

The store doesn’t stock the rare jewel. They call it “too precious to wear” and are encouraging other jewelers to do the same.

The reasoning behind the ban is the effect humans are having on coral reefs. The president of Tiffany Co Foundation, Fernanda Kellogg traveled to see top coral scientists and talk about the impact people are having on the reefs when they break it up and sell it for profit.

Scientists say reefs are more important to the sea, than rain forests are to land.

Miami coral scientist, Andrew Baker, says when people remove coral from the reefs, they are taking a living thing from the water.

He says,

”the job of building a reef ecosystem is that is produces a habitat that all other species depend on.”

Kellogg says they look for the design of coral in other materials. Kellog says, “I think what the alternative is, is beautiful design in other materials. The wonderful sea coral design in silver and gold sprinkled with diamonds. How bad can that be?”

Scientists say, it’s not just the jewelry that is dangerous to seas life, but also decorative coral.

Baker says,

”the removal of corals from jewelry or decor, this is not a critical part of our existence. And it’s one of those activities that really represents a luxury.

So is a heavyweight like Tiffany’s influencing the jewelry industry with its ban on coral?

Kellogg says she hopes other places will take notice.

“The ripple effect is beginning. We’re a long way from being where we need to be.”

Recently the White House and Congress received a letter from 100 scientists and 44 groups asking for much greater protection of reefs.

An international ban on trading certain corals will be proposed later this year.