Things always go up in value, don’t they?

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A Cultured Pearl and Diamond Necklace: Lot 251 Spring 2014 sale

An appraiser or valuer regularly hears things along the lines of “my last appraisal was eight years ago, so I guess it’s gone up since then”.

We do like to think that this is the case, but, sadly, it isn’t always. Some things will go up in value, of course, but others may remain static, or even go down. There are numerous factors that may make an item increase or decrease in value, or bring about no change at all.

Most people don’t expect their car to increase in value (with the exception of some rare collector vehicles). Age and wear and tear play havoc on a car. You rarely expect a ring to go rusty like a well used car, but a gem might chip, or ring might wear thin, an earring become bent or broken.

Outside of damage, there are other reasons why a jewel may change in value.

Fashion dictates prices sometimes. If a celebrity is seen wearing a certain gem, the demand for that type of gem may surge, and the price of that type of gem can increase. When that trend passes, or is eclipsed by another, the price may go down. If you had an appraisal done on your sapphire ring around the time that Prince William gave Kate Middleton her sapphire engagement ring, then the price may have been up, but a few years later, a new appraisal may reflect a lower price, back to the normal.

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A Sapphire and Diamond Ring: Lot 162, Spring 2014 sale

The economy may cause price differences. As the world becomes more vertically integrated, mining companies are selling directly to consumers, and this can mean more aggressive pricing, and the consumer can sometimes buy for less (but still more than at auction). If lower pricing due to market changes takes hold, then the new lower price becomes the standard, and a new appraisal may reflect the new lower purchase price prevailing in the market.

Supply and demand may affect appraised price. A notable example of supply and demand affecting values is the case of South Sea cultured pearls. These are the large pearls grown in the warm waters of the Pacific, North of Australia, all the way up to Southern Asia. Several years ago, the production of these South Sea cultured pearls increased suddenly, and coincided with an increase in the supply of freshwater cultured pearls from China. South Sea cultured pearl prices plummeted to one quarter of their original retail price, and have not come back. An appraisal from the time of the higher prices will certainly be higher than an appraisal prepared now on the same pearls.

On the other hand, other items will certainly go up. If a gold bracelet was last appraised when gold was $350.00 an ounce, and gold has gone up to $1,400.00 an ounce, then it is very likely that the increase in the price of gold will have pushed the appraisal on the bracelet up, too.

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An Enamel and Gold Bangle Bracelet by Fred, Paris: Lot 19, Spring 2014 sale

Another factor is other cost increases, if an item has a large labour costs or established list prices, it may be that it has increased in appraised value. If there is a fine timepiece, and the retail price has increased, the appraisal will have gone up. If a jeweller is producing jewels in a market where the labour costs are increasing, the price of an item from them may increase, and an appraisal should increase to reflect that.

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A Lady’s Diamond and Gold ‘Oyster Perpetual Datejust’ Wristwatch: Lot 83, Spring 2014 sale

 

At auction we see all of these types of jewels, and often see appraisals that accompany them. The appraisals are usually for “replacement value”, calculated at an estimate of the cost to buy a new replacement at full price in a regular retail environment. The amount something may sell for at auction is estimated at “fair market value”, and this is a different amount again. Fair market value is established through comparison to recent auction results for the nearest equivalent item that has recently sold at auction.

An auction aims to sell your jewels at the highest price possible by exposing them to thousands of potential bidders. It is extremely rare, however, to be able to realize the retail appraised value for an item of jewellery or watch sold at auction. We get as close as the bidding takes it, and generally have a reserve (minimum), so you know it won’t go below an agreed amount.

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A Brooch With Greatness

Antique Enamel and Diamond Lapel Locket: Lot 264, Spring 2014 sale

Antique Enamel and Diamond Lapel Locket: Lot 264, Spring 2014 sale

A brooch is something that makes a statement to the world. It’s often worn on a coat, blazer or jacket, it isn’t limited to a time of day or a type of clothing. Women and men wear brooches equally.

The brooch has undergone many changes and variations, from a clip to secure clothes, to a badge of rank for soldiers, and it still serves those purposes, even if only symbolically.

We wear brooches, but only to to symbolically secure our clothes. The drapery of the ancient world may have been secured with a pin or brooch, while the traditional dress clips of the 1930’s and 1940’s were worn symbolically representing such things, but were purely decorative. These days dress clips, which generally come in pairs, are worn with a special fitting that allows them to be joined to form a larger single brooch.

Three Blue Zircon Jewels, Including Dress Clips: Lot 228 Spring 2014 sale

Three Blue Zircon Jewels, Including Dress Clips: Lot 228 Spring 2014 sale

Historically, when brooches weren’t used to secure clothing, they were used to represent a rank in society or membership in an organization. In modern jewellery, a brooch may be work to represent membership in a service club, or years of dedication, perhaps to a job or a relationship. More often than not, however, these days, a brooch is a personal reward, purchased for one’s own enjoyment “because I’ve earned it”.

Madeleine Albright, former secretary of State of the United States, is a famous brooch collector and wearer. Her collection of brooches is extensive, and she is rarely seen without a brooch. Albright has written a book Read My Pins, about her collection of brooches.

Brooches can address many moods, and state many things about the wearer. In a recent auction we featured a beautifully carved tortoiseshell brooch that was purely fun, and a joy to wear.

Antique Tortoiseshell Putto Brooch: Lot 486, spring 2013

Antique Tortoiseshell Putto Brooch: Lot 486, spring 2013

Often a brooch may feature a collection of gems, and is perfect as a spring flower garland.

Multi Gem and Gold Floral Brooch: Lot 283, Spring 2014 sale

Multi Gem and Gold Floral Brooch: Lot 283, Spring 2014 sale

A crescent is a classic shape of brooch, widely used in the 19th Century, it harkens to the “mysterious” East, at a time when the world was getting a little smaller. Europeans were  fascinated with the world of Turkey, Persia (now Iran, the world’s most famous source of turquoise), and further afield.

Antique Turquoise and Diamond Crescent Brooch: Lot 173, Spring 2014 sale

Antique Turquoise and Diamond Crescent Brooch: Lot 173, Spring 2014 sale

The diamond brooch can work well in any situation. Diamonds will complement any outfit and any colour. The Spring auction features an impressive collection of diamond brooches, from antiques, through floral sprays, to very modern statement pieces.

The beginning of the Twentieth Century, and the end of the Victorian era saw the lightening of jewellery forms. The jewels of the Belle Epoque were light, lacy, and had an inspiration from the forms of nature. Brooches were very popular at the time, and these styles carry an enduring beauty.

Belle Epoque Pearl and Diamond Brooch (Circa 1910): Lot 258, Spring 2014 sale

Belle Epoque Pearl and Diamond Brooch (Circa 1910): Lot 258, Spring 2014 sale

Art Deco (around 1925-1930) remains a favourite among jewellery collectors and wearers. The style, originated nearly a century ago, remains fresh and stylish today. The geometric forms work well with so much fashion worn today. Men often wear Art deco brooches on their lapels.

Art Deco Diamond and Platinum Bar Brooch: Lot 269, Spring 2014 sale

Art Deco Diamond and Platinum Bar Brooch: Lot 269, Spring 2014 sale

The 1940’s, in the period after the war, there was a desire to wear big jewels, especially after the restraint and restrictions of the previous five years. Retro is the name of the style from this period. Retro Jewels often feature large curves in highly polished gold and rubies (frequently laboratory grown rubies) and diamonds.

Retro Citrine Ruby, Diamond and Gold Brooch: Lot 327, Spring 2014 sale

Retro Citrine Ruby, Diamond and Gold Brooch: Lot 327, Spring 2014 sale

The 1950’s and 1960’s saw a real interest in the brooch. Going out without being appropriately accessorized with a brooch was like going out without shoes. The well dressed woman had a brooch for every occasion. The classic was a diamond brooch, often in a stylized flower form or a floral spray. With the styles of the 1960’s coming so much into vogue, there is a real interest in the appropriate accompanying accessories. In jewellery, there’s no need to settle for reproductions, it’s possible to purchase originals at auction.

Diamond And Platinum Floral Brooch, 1960's: Lot 183, Spring 2014 sale

Diamond And Platinum Floral Brooch, 1960’s: Lot 183, Spring 2014 sale

Brooches are ready to wear, never needs to be sized, and being worn affixed to clothes, brooches are usually in very good condition. Brooches are classic jewels and perfect statements of personal style.

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A Pearl is a Pearl, isn’t it?

Belle Epoque Pearl and Pendant: Lot 195, Spring 2014 sale

Belle Epoque Pearl and Pendant: Lot 195, Spring 2014 sale

When we think of a pearl, we tend to think of a round white shiny object that comes from an oyster of some sort.

A pearl may well fit that description, but there are so many variations available, it is quite surprising.

Historically, a pearl is a roundish to randomly shaped gem that has formed accidentally in a shellfish, usually a bivalve. A bivalve is a shell fish (mollusc) that has a two part shell, like an oyster, a clam, or even a quahog.

Hold on… QUAHOG?, what’s that? A quahog (usually pronounced “cohog”) is a shellfish found along the Eastern Coast of North America and particularly around Cape Cod and New Jersey (along the Jersey shore). These clams are an important food source, and which very rarely will produce a lilac colour pearl. Lot 119 in the June 22, 2014 Dupuis sale features one of these rare and unusual pearls, measuring 10.3mm in diameter, and estimated $1,500-$2,500.00 with a diamond on a gold stick pin. The catalogue will be available shortly at www.dupuis.ca

 

Antique Natural Pearl and Coloured Diamond Stickpin with a Quahog Pearl: Lot 119, Spring 2014 sale

Antique Natural Pearl and Coloured Diamond Stickpin with a Quahog Pearl: Lot 119, Spring 2014 sale

We do occasionally find a pearl in a univalve mollusc, too. A univalve is a mollusc that has a one-part shell, like a snail or perhaps a conch, from the Caribbean. Conch pearls are usually pink, and are also very rare and valuable. Lot 660 in the spring sale features a bright pink conch pearl, estimated at $1,000-$1,200

 

Conch Pearl Diamond and Platinum Ring: Lot 660, Spring 2014 sale

Conch Pearl Diamond and Platinum Ring: Lot 660, Spring 2014 sale

With the development of pearl culturing in Japan around 1915, the pearl industry changed forever. What we think of as a pearl today is a cultured pearl.

A cultured pearl is still produced by these natural gem-makers of the sea (or lake or river), but humans help out by placing something inside the molluscs to start the process of pearl growth.

Now we have pearls being cultured in the ocean, with the traditional cultured pearls grown in cooler waters such as those around Japan, the larger South Sea cultured pearls grown in warmer waters and in larger molluscs, black cultured pearls cost famously grown around Tahiti, and many shapes and sizes of cultured pearls grown in the freshwater (or “sweet water”) of lakes and rivers, particularly in China.

Freshwater cultured pearls can grow in very large sizes and in many unusual shapes and colours. The upcoming auction Dupuis will be featuring a few necklaces of large and interesting freshwater cultured pearls. Freshwater cultured pearls make a great statement for a remarkably modest price. Lot 407 in the Spring sale features huge freshwater cultured pearls, and is estimated at $1,400-$1,600.

407407Still, natural pearls remain rare and highly desirable. We really see a lot of interest in natural pearls because they are not replaceable. In the Spring 2014 (June 22) sale there are several notable natural pearl jewels. Among the natural pearls in the sale are one brooch, lot 365, with a notably large, 14.74mm natural pearl, and a necklace, lot 277, with three strands of pearls (including a single cultured pearl).

Natural Pearl Diamond and Platinum Brooch: Lot 365, Spring 2014 sale

Natural Pearl Diamond and Platinum Brooch: Lot 365, Spring 2014 sale

 

Antique Natural Pearl Sapphire and Diamond Necklace: Lot 277 Spring 2014 sale

Antique Natural Pearl Sapphire and Diamond Necklace: Lot 277 Spring 2014 sale

 

Pearls are probably the original gem, because they are ready to use straight out of the shell, and one can imagine an early cave dweller with a broken tooth having enjoyed a meal of oysters and carrying the reward of a beautiful lustrous pearl.

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Art Nouveau Pendant at Auction

Art Nouveau Pendant at Auction

Art Nouveau Pendant at Auction

To be offered in the Spring 2014 sale, June 22, this pendant is an elegantly simple jewel. It came to the auction in a fitted box, can you imagine a workshop set up specifically to build boxes that are made to fit individual jewels?

This pendant dates from the time when only natural pearls were available, so it is likely that the pearls are natural. We have not verified them, but they are certainly bright and lustrous.

This Art Nouveau design is symmetrical, with a lyre-like form composed of diamonds in ribbons of silver topped gold.

Dating from before white gold was introduced, and prior to the widespread use of platinum, silver was the white metal of choice for setting diamonds to show them to the best effect.

After a century, the silver has a dark colour, and perhaps shows the diamonds to even better effect. However, even compared to many modern items, it is in very good condition.

Its size and form are perfect for almost any occasion, from casual gatherings to formal affairs.

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Modern Cameos

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I have just returned from the gem shows at Tucson Arizona. Tucson is the place where the whole gem and jewellery world gathers to who off what is new, interesting, and happening. I go there to learn what is in the market, to give lectures, and participate on specialist panels.

I was struck by the work of the Italian cameo worker Vincenzo Imposimato. The work of this artist is very distinctive. Even items that depict conventional images show unique elements, and most are entirely distinctive.

The designs are unlike others that I have seen. It is rare for cameos to be pierced with openings from front to back.

These carvings will make for very distinctive jewels.

At auction, we regularly feature cameos, and many of them are artist pieces that are unique representations of their own time. Recently, Lot 460 in the Spring 2013 sale featured a very fine art cameo by Nino Ammendola.460

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Appraisals serve different needs and markets

Antique bracelet with gold charms

Antique bracelet with gold charms

An appraisal can be prepared to serve different needs. The same item may be appraised to allow an insurer to add it to a household replacement policy, to allow a court determine an amount for settling a bankruptcy, divorce, or estate (potentially all different amounts), to determine a liquidation amount for scrap, or for fair market value, such as might be realized at auction. There are other types and levels of value too.

This bracelet was lot 600 in the Fall 2013 Dupuis auction. It sold for $2,000.00. The fair market value has now been established. Fair market value is the amount that a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an open market, both parties being aware of all the facts, and with no time pressure.

Auction experts provide estimates of fair market value to consignors, and these are based on experience of similar items that have been sold recently at auction. The pre-auction estimate for this bracelet was $1,300-$1,600, the upper end not being too far from the hammer price (what it sold for at auction). The difference may be accounted for by the bidders in the room, on the telephone, or on-line at the time, plus changes in the market since consignment. Appraisal is also not an exact science.

If the bracelet had been appraised for liquidation, it would really be for the gold content as scrap, and would likely have been in the range of around $900.00.

If the appraisal had been for replacement with a recently made, brand new equivalent, it would possibly be as much as $6,000.00-$7,000.00, because it would require a very large amount of custom work to produce matches for antique chain and charms. An insurer will often not have a lost antique item reproduced with a new item, and may opt to buy a modern equivalent, because a new item is not antique anyway.

Fair market value appraisals are used for many applications and markets. Beyond being the method of determining the auction value (which is usually the highest return a private individual might realize when selling jewels) fair market value appraisals are used for donations to charities and museums, divorce settlement, and many other legal applications.

The details in an appraisal should not differ substantially from one to the next, but the dollar value at the bottom of the page can be very different, each is valid and important in its own way, and for its own intended use.

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Watch Wednesday

 Gentleman's Stainless Steel Antimagnetic Wristwatch, Rolex, circa 1934 at Dupuis Auctions

Gentleman’s Stainless Steel Antimagnetic Wristwatch, Rolex, circa 1934 at Dupuis Auctions

Rolex is a name that always creates a stir at auction. This model, lot 148 in the Fall 2013 auction, sold for nearly double its estimate. It doesn’t look like the popular image of a modern Rolex, but this rare timepiece was very interesting to bidders. Is this 1930’s steel chronograph like something you might have in the back of a drawer somewhere? Consignments are being accepted across Canada until April for the Spring 2014 sale.

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Colombian emerald crystals and jewels

Emerald Pendant at Dupuis Auctioneers

Emerald Pendant at Dupuis Auctioneers

Colombian emeralds tell their stories well. The inclusions are so distinctive that they really can’t be from anywhere else. These hexagonal crystals have recently come from the Chivor mine in Colombia. They have “three phase” inclusions, with a solid, a liquid and a gas. The solid is a crystal and the gas is a bubble, and the bubble and crystal are in a liquid in a completely sealed off space in the crystal. I don’t know how long it has been there, but I do know where it came from. Emeralds from elsewhere don’t have these, and they are even identifiable under high magnification in finished gems such as lot 209 from the fall 2013 Dupuis auction. Visit www.dupuis.ca for upcoming news on the spring 2014 auction.

"three phase" inclusions

“three phase” inclusions

"three phase" inclusions

“three phase” inclusions

"three phase" inclusions

“three phase” inclusions

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Jewellery carries a message

Two Antique Gold Memorial Brooches at Dupuis Auctions

Two Antique Gold Memorial Brooches at Dupuis Auctions

These antique jewels are the perfect representation of the dying days of the Victorian Empire. Beautifully made mourning jewels conveyed a message of good taste in fine craftsmanship, and remembered someone who can’t be with the wearer any longer. A poignant memory of an important era, and very wearable in todays fashion environment.

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Watch this space on Wednesday:

Gentleman's Stainless Steel 'Bubble Skeleton'  Wristwatch, Corum

Gentleman’s Stainless Steel ‘Bubble Skeleton’ Wristwatch, Corum at Dupuis Auctions

As the phone is our day to day timepiece, the wristwatch has become an important accessory, both for men and women. Making a statement of your mood, style, or sense of fun is easy with the range of choices available at auction. One of 67 watches offered in the Fall 2013 sale, this Corum Bubble bares all, is very fun, and sold for nearly double its estimate. The Spring sale might be the way to find a new home for your fine timepieces.

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