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Buying antique jewellery is both ethical and eco-friendly as harmful and destructive mining processes are not needed to make an item yours. So give yourself a pat on the back!
Find Out MoreSybil Dunlop was a British jewellery designer, best known for the jewellery and silverA metallic element which is malleable and ductile, and white in colour, making it ideal for use in jewellery. It is usually mixed with copper to improve its hardness.
objects in the Arts and Crafts style that she produced in the 1920s and 1930s. She was born in in Hampstead in NorthLondon in 1889 and died in 1968. She established a workshop and shop at 69 Kensington Church Street, London W8, and in the early 1920s.
This floral brooch was made circa 1920-1930 and has been set with naturalA natural stone is called such because it has not been subjected to any treatments. pearls and old mine cutAn 18th, 19th and early 20th century diamond shape, typically cushion or asymmetrical, marked by a small table, a high crown and a large culet. Culets are the small flat facets at the bottom of a stone which appear to the untrained eye as a hole in the middle of the stone. Before the advent of modern machinery which allows for the precise faceting we see tod... diamonds. It is in the original case that has been printed on the silk “Sybil Dunlop. Art Jewellers and Silversmiths. 69 Church St. Kensington. London W”.
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Let's find it for you Book your AppointmentBuying antique jewellery is both ethical and eco-friendly as harmful and destructive mining processes are not needed to make an item yours. So give yourself a pat on the back!
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