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Vintage rings collage — scouted by ÂGÉE Milano
Vintage rings from every era — collage scouted by ÂGÉE
Guide
Vintage emerald rings collage — scouted by ÂGÉE Milano
Jewellery Eras: A Short Guide, Georgian to Vintage Modern
Every piece belongs to an era, and every era has a grammar. From Georgian closed-back settings to the bold gold of the 1980s: the short guide we use when we read a jewel — dates first, character second.
Guide

So how do you place a jewel in time? You learn its grammar — the way each era cut its stones, held them, finished an edge. Below, the eras we work with most, from Georgian to Vintage Modern: enough to read a piece by eye, before the hallmark confirms it.

A jewel dates itself by its grammar — the cut, the setting, the edge. The hallmark only confirms it.

Vintage gold signet ring with diamonds — ÂGÉE editorial

Georgian (1714–1837)

Handmade before industrialisation: closed-back settings, foiled stones, nature motifs. Survivors are rare — gold was often reused — which makes documented Georgian pieces some of the most precious on the market.

Victorian (1837–1901)

The long era of Queen Victoria: sentimental lockets, snakes as symbols of eternal love, mourning jewellery in jet, and later bold gold work. Romantic, symbolic, deeply personal.

Edwardian (1901–1915)

Lightness above all: platinum lace, garlands, bows and millegrain detail, often set with old European cut diamonds. Elegant, airy, aristocratic.

Art Nouveau (1890–1910)

Nature drawn in curves: dragonflies, orchids, female profiles, enamel work. A short, visionary movement — original pieces are highly collectible.

Art Déco (1920–1935)

Geometry organising light: calibré-cut emeralds and sapphires, old European cut diamonds, strong symmetry, platinum and white gold. The most requested vintage era — and the most imitated, which is why documentation matters. We decoded it signal by signal here.

Retro (1935–1950)

Bold volumes in yellow and rose gold, tank bracelets, oversized cocktail rings. Glamour built during hard times — sculptural and confident.

Mid-Century (1950–1970)

Post-war joy: textured gold, animal brooches, turquoise and coral, playful volumes. The era of the great Italian goldsmiths.

Vintage Modern (1980–2000)

Bold gold, tubogas, strong lines and cocktail stones — pieces made for presence. Recent enough to wear daily, old enough to be one of one.

Every era in the archive is read the same way: hallmark first, construction second, provenance always. How we do it is on Our Method.

Browse the archive
Wanda
Wanda
£4,631
Piera
Piera
£1,398
Esmeralda
Esmeralda
£2,796
Miranda
Miranda
£2,272
Giuditta
Giuditta
£3,408
Ludovica
Ludovica
£1,923
Alice
Alice
£1,398
Asia
Asia
£1,398
Colette
Colette
£2,534
Vivienne
Vivienne
£1,311
Ondina
Ondina
£2,185
Kim
Kim
£2,185
Selma
Selma
£787
Aramita
Aramita
£787
Kristel
Kristel
£787
Kira
Kira
£1,049
Eliana
Eliana
£1,573
Roberta
Roberta
£3,059
Francesca
Francesca
£3,495
Silvia
Silvia
£3,932
Eugenia
Eugenia
£10,485
Mirella
Mirella
£1,748
Diana
Diana
£306
Celestina
Celestina
£306
Marella
Marella
£6,117
Amelia
Amelia
£1,224
Cecilia
Cecilia
£1,224
Eleonora
Eleonora
£1,661
Ornella
Ornella
£3,059
Blair
Blair
£1,661
Baby
Baby
£350
Drusilla
Drusilla
£6,990
Corinna
Corinna
£1,661
Stevenson Charm
Stevenson Charm
£394
Marcella
Marcella
£437
Donatella
Donatella
£350
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