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  2. A Harry Winston Necklace With a Giant 38-Carat Diamond ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/harry-winston-necklace-featuring...

    Designed by Jacques Timey, the necklace features a coveted Golconda stone. A Harry Winston Necklace With a Giant 38-Carat Diamond Could Be Yours for $7.5 Million Skip to main content

  3. The Winston Blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Winston_Blue

    The Winston Blue is the name given to what was the largest flawless vivid blue diamond [1] [4] [5] bought by Harry Winston, Inc. (a wholly owned subsidiary of The Swatch Group from January 2013) on May 15, 2014, from an anonymous person for $23.8 million at Christie's Geneva Magnificent Jewels sale. The approximately $1.8003 million per carat ...

  4. An $8 Million Necklace and More Outrageously Expensive ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/8-million-necklace-more...

    Not only did he buy her jewelry, he bought her an $8 million dollar Bulgari diamond and ruby necklace, according to People. Victoria then showed off her new jewels at that year’s Met Gala. More ...

  5. Huge diamond necklace linked to Marie Antoinette scandal ...

    www.aol.com/huge-diamond-necklace-worn-2...

    A diamond necklace that has been worn at two British coronations, and is thought to contain stones from the infamous necklace at the heart of a Marie Antoinette scandal, sold for over 4.2 million ...

  6. Signet Jewelers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signet_Jewelers

    Signet Jewelers Ltd. (Ratner Group 1949–1993 then Signet Group plc to September 2008) is, as of 2015, the world's largest retailer of diamond jewellery. [1] The company is domiciled in Bermuda and headquartered in Akron, Ohio, and is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The group operates in the middle market jewellery segment and has ...

  7. Gerald Ratner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Ratner

    Ratner joined the family business in 1966 and built up an extremely successful chain of jewellers during the 1980s, of which he was CEO.The shops shocked the formerly staid jewellery industry by displaying fluorescent orange posters advertising cut-price bargains and by offering low price ranges.