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Bulgari: Contemporary Classic
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11529 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
10 / 1986 |
1,874 Words |
| Author
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Ettagale Blauer Ettagale Blauer is a freelance writer based in New York. |
IMPORTANT JEWELS - what the French call haute bijouterie, high jewelry - are by definition gem-heavy and platinum-set. Yet within the constrains of that description, the unique style of each maker is easily identifiable.
Standing well apart from its peers, and occupying a blazingly different niche though still counted as one of this select group, is Bulgari, the Italian jeweler based in Rome, with branches in Monte Carlo, Paris, Geneva, and New York.
Bulgari is at once younger and older than its world-famous competitors. Today operated by three Bulgari brothers, the firm was started by the current generation's grandfather some 100 years ago when he arrived in Rome from his native Greece and began peddling silver clasps and buckles from a cart atop Rome's Spanish Steps. A shop on the Via Condotti, today Rome's premier shopping street, soon followed.
With a reverence for the history of the enterprise but the enthusiasm of their generation, the three brothers have brought Bulgari very much into the 1980s. None among them is more a part of this new spirit than Nicola Bulgari, the youngest, who at age thirty-one arrived in the New World to open the firm's New York store in 1971.
At a time when women of substance expected certain easily-recognizable virtues from their jewelry - the flash and fir of diamonds, the reassuring warmth of rubies, sapphires, and emeralds (the fabled red, blue, and green that form precious jewelry's own "flag"), all of them faceted to perfection and strung together with a minimum of metal, generally platinum or white gold -
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