Zoom in on images of the latest designer watches and luxury jewellery, plus unique wedding bands, unusual engagement rings, celebrities and more.
Limited-edition Chaumet Épi de Blé gold brooch, created especially for the Promenade Bucolique exhibition, which ...
Chaumet stylised leaves necklace from the 1970s, currently on display at the Promenade Bucolique exhibition ...
Chaumet Arum flower clip earrings, circa 1975, when designs featuring exotic naturalist motifs were popular.
Chaumet ladies' watch, circa 1910, decorated with a colourful enamelled rose on one side and ...
Chaumet aigrette, circa 1910, inspired by the V-shaped hairstyle of Mary, Queen of Scots, and ...
Chaumet wheat sheaf tiara designed in 1811 for Empress Marie-Louise, Napoléon’s second wife. She commissioned ...
With open-work wings in diamond-encrusted white gold, the buzzing bees on this new Chaumet Abeille ...
This autumn, Chaumet is launching a new 13-piece high jewellery collection starring the Maison's famous ...
Chaumet Abeille brooch set with opal, sapphire, citrine motifs, mandarin garnets, yellow sapphires and diamonds.
Chaumet watches Attrape-moi...si tu m'aimes model comes in a 35mm yellow gold case and is ...
Chaumet Hortensia high jewellery secret watch. A bouquet of hydrangea flowers, crafted from sculpted opals, ...
The Joséphine ring from Chaumet has quickly established itself as an iconic engagement ring design. ...
Chaumet Attrape-moi...si tu m'aimes 35mm rose gold watch featuring two poppy flowers made from carved ...
This delightful Chaumet Attrape-moi...si tu m'aimes 35mm white gold watch features a hand-painted dial whirring ...
The pear-cut shape is integral to the new Chaumet Joséphine high jewellery collection, and none ...
This impressive Rondes de Nuit necklace takes the pear-cut, so much part of the Chaumet ...
This beautiful cocktail-style Rondes de Nuit ring from Chaumet's new Joséphine collection features a pear-cut ...
Napoleon considered the cushion cut the most beautiful of all the diamond shapes and, in ...
Communications firm Edelman released its annual Trust Barometer[1] report last week to coincide with the gathering of world leaders at Davos. As the most influential, powerful and wealthy were gearing up for a week of talks focused on the future of capitalism and meeting the global goals, the Barometer provided stark insight into the challenges we face. Fifty-six percent of people believe capitalism does more harm than good.