(#227) A Fabergé silver kovsh, workmaster Stephen Väkevä (Wakeva), St Petersburg, 1899-1904
A Fabergé silver kovsh, workmaster Stephen Väkevä (Wakeva), St Petersburg, 1899-1904, the polished bowl with reeded and line-engraved border, the cartouche-form handle cast with strapwork, the prow with an Imperial eagle, the base inset with a 1 rouble silver coin of Peter the Great dated 1725, on three ball feet, gilt interior.
equal.lv
The Cherub with Chariot Egg or Angel with Egg in Chariot is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one of a series of fifty-two jeweled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was crafted and delivered in 1888 to the then Tsar of Russia, Alexander III. This is one of the lost Imperial eggs, so few details are known about it.
20 Stunning Pieces of Russian Imperial Art in Washington » American University in Moscow
Fabergé clock. An 18th century silver rococo-style clock, with secret panels, that belonged to Empress Maria Fedorovna, mother of Tsar Nicholas II. According to legend, Maria admired the original version of this clock, which was designed by English craftsman James Cox for Empress Alexandra, Nicholas’ wife. The royal couple then commissioned Fabergé to create a copy of the chest-of-drawers-style timepiece, to which he added side panels that reveal portraits of Nicholas and Alexandra.
UUS777 » Daftar Slot Gacor Internasional Pertama Indonesia
St. Basil's Cathedral Musical Egg. The lower half of the Egg is Limoges porcelain hand painted in midnight blue with decor of gold leafy arabesques.The upper half of the Egg is hand cut crystal in a single large sunburst that centers at the crown of the Egg. The cut crystal top makes it possible to see the Cathedral even when the Egg is closed. The clasp is a medallion of the Romanov double headed eagle insignia. The melody played by the music box is a theme from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.