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What is the value of my Faberge Egg?
Jun 06, 2009 by Haribo | Posted in Trivia
I don't be sure if its fake or real, I have no idea at all.
I got it as a gift last year, I personally think its worth nothing, but would like to be acquainted with.
If you are able to determine this for me, please say so and I will email you a picture of it.
Thank you.
Serious Answers only please :)
P.S I had no idea what category this question falls into.
I waver it is an authentic Faberge egg.
But I suppose it there is always the slim chance it could be one of the missing eggs.
A Fabergé egg is any one of 105 jeweled eggs made by Peter Carl Fabergé and his assistants between 1885 and 1917, of which only 69 are known to persist.
They are worth a fortune.
At auction the 1913 "Winter Egg" sold for -
$5.6 million (US) in 1994 and $9.6 million (US) in 2002.
Elizabeth | Jun 06, 2009
If it's trusted, it costs millions of dollars, or atleast thats what the website said. email me a picture and i'll remedy u out!
carebear111109@yahoo.com
Trista | Jun 06, 2009
The Faberge Egg looking Building in London, whats its name?
Jan 28, 2009 by Elliott M | Posted in London
So there is an egg looking construction in london. Its design is very interestiong and i wanted to look it up!
I wanted to know what its called. If you need a look-alike here is a link VV
Londoners call it the gherkin, but it situated at 30 St Mary Axe, formerly the Swiss Re Construction, is a skyscraper in London's main financial district, the City of London; completed in December 2003 and opened on 28 April 2004. It is 180 metres (591 ft) in altitude, with 40 floors. Its construction symbolised the start of a new high-rise construction boom in London. The erection's name is its address — St Mary Axe being the street it is on.
The building was designed by Lord Foster, then-partner Ken Shuttleworth and Arup engineers, and was constructed by Skanska of Sweden between 2001 and 2004.
The nearest London Insurgents station is Aldgate.
PHIL P | Jan 28, 2009
Demographics of Russia, Invicta Russian Diver BlueSoviet Uniform, Cccp Hockey- Russian book
My class project - faberge egg inspired pendant
So ... I've been in my metal jewelry lie class - 6 weeks?? - something like that and my assignment (since I'm a newbie at making bezels) was to clear a design with a cup bezel. Now I'm not a big pendant person, earrings and bracelets are more my passion, but I figured that bigger is change one's mind for a beginner. So ... I decided to make a pendant AND earrings. I'm focusing on the pendant, but the earring bezels are also in enlargement. The first step is ... DESIGN IT! So I flipped through some books in class and found a cool lapis colored faberge egg with criss-delete gold patterns. I canNOT find that same egg anywhere on the web - so you'll just have to imagine what it looks like. Here is the drawing I came up with for my pendant ...
Next! Along the bezel. You start with bezel wire, shape it to fit around your stone, file the ends flat and solder them together ...
If the bezel with one's heart in one's mouth is too tall you then have to sand it down, and down, and down and ... (can you tell I had to do this for the earring bezels??? still have some sanding to do on one of them ... breathe ...). Next you cut out a piece of sheet metal and solder the edge to the sheet to create a cup. Important things to call to mind here - make sure your bezel edge AND sheet metal piece are FLAT!...
Chocolate Easter eggs made by Belgian chocolate maker Dominique Persoone are pictured at his Chocolate-Sell out Shop in Antwerp March 30, 2010. A chocolate made mock-up of a Faberge easter egg is pictured at a workshop of "Fassbender & Rausch" chocolate maker and more »
FABERGE EGGS: These eggs are decorative, made of idolized metals and decorated with combinations of enamel and gem stones. Named after the founder, the term “Fabergé egg” has become a synonym of luxuriousness and the eggs are regarded as masterpieces of the and more »
Every Easter as I keep a sharp lookout for the grandkids color their eggs and define them with their artwork, I think about that magnificent Faberge egg and the exciting adventures I had in Russia, a rare, vibrant and historical land that makes your heart beat faster and more »
Eggs reached their highest, most costly art shape with those commissioned by Czars, their families, and Russian aristocracy from imperial jeweler Karl Fabergé. Made of enamel and cutesy metals, festooned with diamonds and other jewels, the eggs