House of Fabergé

The firm was famous for designing elaborate jewel-encrusted Fabergé eggs for Russian emperors, and for a range of other work of high quality and intricate detail.[2] In 1964, Rubin sold his Fabergé Inc. company to cosmetics firm Rayette Inc., which changed its name to Rayette-Fabergé Inc. As the brand was resold more times, companies using the Fabergé name launched clothing lines, the cologne Brut (which became the best-selling cologne at the time), the perfume Babe, hair products, and also undertook film production.In the 1830s, Gustav Faberge moved to Saint Petersburg to train as a goldsmith under Andreas Ferdinand Spiegel, who specialised in making gold boxes.This was a fashionable establishment for the sons of the affluent middle classes and the lower echelons of the nobility, providing an indication of the success of his father's business.He received tuition from respected goldsmiths in Frankfurt, France and England, attended a course at Schloss's Commercial College in Paris and viewed the objects in the galleries of Europe's leading museums.While Agathon's education was restricted to Dresden, he was noted as a talented designer who provided the business with fresh impetus, until his death 13 years later.He ordered that specimens of work by the House of Fabergé should be displayed in the Hermitage Museum as examples of superb contemporary Russian craftsmanship.In 1885, the House of Fabergé was bestowed with the coveted title "Goldsmith by special appointment to the Imperial Crown", beginning an association with the Russian tsars.In 1885, Tsar Alexander III commissioned the House of Fabergé to make an Easter egg as a gift for his wife, the Empress Maria Feodorovna.The most common animal carvings were elephants and pigs but included custom made miniatures of pets of the British Royal family and other notables.Madame Fabergé and her eldest son, Eugène, avoided capture by escaping under the cover of darkness through the snow-covered woods by sleigh and on foot.Meanwhile in Germany, Carl Fabergé became seriously ill. Eugène reached Wiesbaden in June 1920 and accompanied his father to Switzerland, where other members of the family had taken refuge.In 1924, Alexander and Eugène opened Fabergé & Cie in Paris, where they had a modest success making the types of items that their father retailed years before.The reputation of Fabergé as a producer of the highest standard was maintained by publications and major exhibitions, such as those at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1994 and the Royal Collection in 2003–4.[22] Following the end of the Soviet Union and the rise of the oligarchs, Russian collectors sought to repatriate many of Fabergé's works, and auction prices reached record highs.Actress and model Margaux Hemingway received a $1 million contract to promote the perfume Babe by Fabergé in an advertising campaign.New product lines were introduced, including men's, women's and children's apparel under the trademarks Billy the Kid, Scoreboard and Wonderknit.In 1989, the German jewelry manufacture company Victor Mayer was given the exclusive licensing rights to produce heirloom quality Fabergé Eggs, jewellery and watches in 18 carat gold and platinum with gem stones, vitreous enamel and diamonds.The first contemporary Fabergé jewellery and egg collection was presented to the alleged heir to the Russian crown, Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia, in Munich, Germany in 1991.All licensed products of the time have ten identical trademarks or stamps, a Russian eagle with the words below: "Fabergé Paris - London - New York".The new company Lever Fabergé owned hundreds of cosmetics, household and other brands, including Dove, Impulse, Sure, Lynx, Organics, Timotei, Signal, Persil, Comfort, Domestos, Surf, Sun, and Cif.They set up an initial investment joint venture, a complex Cayman Islands structure to be funded by Renova Group and managed by Gilbertson.[33] The trademarks, licences and associated rights were acquired by a newly constituted company, Fabergé Limited,[34] which was registered in the Cayman Islands.In 2012, Gilbertson and a related trust on the one hand, Renova Group, Vekselberg and Vladimir Kutnetsov met in court in the Cayman Islands over the original acquisition of the Fabergé brand name from Unilever.[38] In 2017, the Head Office of Fabergé jewellery brand (which is located in London) noticed Mariana Voinova in the photographic project for L'Officiel Ukraine.It houses a very large collection of some 1,500 items including the Karelian Birch egg, made exclusively in 1917 for Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.The museum also owns one of the Constellation eggs, which Ivanov claims is the original finished piece, also purchased by the Tsar as an easter gift for his wife Alexandra Feodorovna (Alix of Hesse).[46] The category Fauxbergé might relate to all objects created starting from the time of company founder Carl Fabergé's tenure until the present day.
The firm's logo in 1908
Gustav Faberge and his wife, Charlotte Jungstedt, 1890s
The Moscow Kremlin egg, 1906
Purple amethyst cane handle by Fabergé with white enamel, rose and yellow gold, and a string of pearls. Circa 1890–1898
Nephrite Jade Bell Push by Fabergé. Circa 1890
Fabergé Winter-Egg, designed and manufactured in 1997 by Victor Mayer GmbH & Co. KG, Pforzheim, Germany
Fabergé (disambiguation)RussianromanizedjewellerySaint PetersburgGustav FabergéPeter CarlAgathonOctober RevolutionFabergé eggsAlexanderFabergé & CieSamuel RubinFabergé Inc.FauxbergéGustav FabergePicardyRevocation of the Edict of NantesHuguenotsSchwedt-on-OderBerlinLivoniaEstoniagoldsmithsdiacriticFrancophiliaFrenchroyal courtaristocracyluxury goodsPeter Carl FabergéDresdenGrand TourEuropeFrankfurtFrankfurt-am-MainAgathon FabergéHermitage MuseumMoscowTsar Alexander IIIFabergé eggMoscow KremlinEmpress Maria FeodorovnaHen EggVictor VekselbergEmpress Alexandra Feodorovnahardstone carvingsrock crystalenamelRoyal CollectionMichael PerkhinHenrik WigströmMarjorie Merriweather PostBarbara HuttonCartierOdessaLondonBolsheviksPetrogradBad HomburgWiesbadenFinlandSwitzerlandLausanneHong KongVictoria & Albert MuseumRothschild Fabergé EggChristie'sRothschildJoan RiversFabergé (cosmetics)Brut 33communist RussiaArmand Hammerolive oilSpanish Civil WarGeorge BarrieJoe NamathFarrah FawcettCary GrantRoger MooreAcademy AwardA Touch of ClassMargaux HemingwayMeshulam RiklisElizabeth ArdenEli Lilly and CompanyUnileverL'OrealVictor Mayer18 caratGéza von HabsburgGrand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of RussiaMunich, GermanyLimogesThe Franklin MintRussian eagleLever FabergéLever BrothersImpulseTimoteiSignalPersilComfortDomestosRussian oligarchViktor Vekselbergjoint ventureCayman IslandsRenova GroupGemfieldsTatiana FabergéSarah FabergéHarrodsMayfairAlexander IvanovBaden-BadenKarelian BirchNicholas II of RussiaConstellation eggsAlexandra Feodorovna (Alix of Hesse)James BondOctopussyMalcolm ForbesOcean's 12George ClooneyGeza von HabsburgMattelBarbieThe Simpsons'Round SpringfieldBleeding Gums MurphyBellagioPärnuFabergé workmasterSnowman, A. KennethGreenwich, CTRoyal Collection TrustHillwood Museumvon Habsburg, GézaHirmer VerlagThe TimesThe New York TimesThe Sydney Morning HeraldForbesThe Daily TelegraphIndependent OnlineCompanies HouseNew York PostBatsfordRandom HouseFaber & FaberRussian Imperial FamilyAraratBreguetChopardCristalFarina gegenüberImperial Porcelain FactoryKhlebnikovMikimoto KōkichiPatek Philippe & Co.Shustov & SonsSmirnoffSteinway & SonsTiffany & Co.