Tatler Hong Kong

5 Famous Jewellery Collectors

These women are proof that diamonds are a girl’s best friend

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Elizabeth Taylor

This actress’s private collection was one of the world’s most important, thanks to generous gifts from her on-off husband Richard Burton. “I feel as though I’m only the custodian of my jewellery,” she remarked in her book

Elizabeth Taylor: My Love Affair With Jewelry. “When I die and they go off to auction, I hope whoever buys them gives them a really good home.” After Taylor’s death in 2011, her collection went to auction through Christie’s, amassing US$144 million, making it the most valuable sale of jewellery in history. Bravo. 2

Queen Elizabeth II

It’s no surprise that Queen Elizabeth II has inherited some extraordin­ary jewels, which have been passed down through a long line of British monarchs. Her most famous piece, of course, is the Imperial State Crown which she wore alongside a diamond necklace for her coronation. The former was originally made for the coronation of her father, King George VI, in 1937. Set with 2,868 diamonds in silver and gold, the headpiece also features sapphires, emeralds and pearls.

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Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Jackie O’s jewellery made headlines in 2010 after a three-strand set of simulated pearls that were valued at about US$65 sold for US$211,500. Many of her pieces were sold by an unidentifi­ed British collector who purchased them at a Sotheby’s auction in 1996, two years after her death. Several jewels were gifts from Kennedy Onassis’s first husband, John F Kennedy, before she was widowed in 1963, including a Tiffany & Co gold brooch that JFK gave to her a few days prior to his being sworn in as US president. 4

María Félix

This Mexican actress had a penchant for extravagan­ce and famously commission­ed Cartier to create one-of-a-kind animalinsp­ired jewels. In 1975, the maison handcrafte­d a superb necklace for Félix, which depicts a pair of emerald-studded and diamond-drenched crocodiles. The story goes that Félix, known for playing femme fatale roles, marched into Cartier’s Paris boutique with a baby crocodile, demanding the jeweller replicate the animal’s face, body, legs and tail for the piece. Talk about a woman who knows what she wants. 5 Wallis Simpson In 1936, when King Edward VIII chose to marry his twice-divorced American girlfriend Wallis Simpson, he was forced to give up the British throne. The couple would later become famous for their high society parties and lavish lifestyles, and this included Simpson’s opulent taste in exceptiona­l jewellery. After her death, her beautiful collection made history in 1987 at a Sotheby’s auction in Geneva. It fetched an eye-watering US$50 million, which at the time was a record for a singleowne­d jewellery collection. Fun fact: Elizabeth Taylor and Joan Collins were among the buyers.

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