Fabergé & Cie

Fabergé & Cie is a jewellery firm founded in 1924 in Paris, by the sons of Peter Carl Fabergé, Alexander Julius Fabergé (1877–1952) and Eugène Fabergé (1874–1960) together with Fabergé's business partner and jewellery designer Andrea Marchetti from the Fabergé store in London which had closed in 1918.

History

After their fathers famous jewelry company in Moscow was nationalised by the Bolsheviks in 1917 the brothers moved to Paris and continued to make and sell Fabergé jewelry. [1]They also specialized in the appraisal and repair of historic Fabergé items. Their stamp in the jewels was "FABERGÉ, PARIS". The store was located in the most high end shopping area on 281 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. From the 1920s to the 1980s the German jeweler Victor Mayer produced Fabergé eggs and jewelry for Fabergé Paris. The stamp was 'Fabergé Paris, Victor Mayer, year of production'.[2] Alexander Julius Fabergé married his first wife Nina Fabergé (born Belicheva) and had a daughter named Irina Fabergé. He married his second wife Johanna Fabergé and they had a son also named Alexander Cyril Fabergé (1912-1985). The brand name Fabergé was eventually used by an American company for the use of beauty products. In 1943, Samuel Rubin registered the Fabergé name for perfume in the United States. The trade name Fabergé was not filed in France as a jewelry trade mark until 1968. In 1978 a New York Lawyer filed suit on behalf of the Fabergé Family but lost the case. Until 2001 Fabergé & Cie maintained the sole rights to produce and sell Fabergé brand jewelry only in France.[3] The Bulgarian born prince Charles Lahovary, whose wife was the daughter of the Fabergé business partner Andreas Marchetti, was the last owner of store when it closed down in 2001[4][5][6][7][8][9]

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.