Georg Jensen Sapphire
Recent Sales
Vintage 1920s Danish Art Nouveau More Rings
Sapphire, 18k Gold
Mid-20th Century Danish Modernist Cocktail Rings
Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold
Vintage 1940s Danish Art Nouveau Fashion Rings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
20th Century Danish Art Deco Retro Bracelets
Vintage 1940s Cocktail Rings
Sapphire, Platinum
Vintage 1920s Danish Art Nouveau Link Bracelets
Blue Sapphire, Sterling Silver
20th Century Danish Romantic Drop Earrings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
20th Century Danish Romantic Cluster Rings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
20th Century Danish Art Nouveau Brooches
Amber, Amethyst, Chrysophrase, Moonstone, Sapphire, Sterling Silver
20th Century Danish Art Nouveau Cluster Rings
Cultured Pearl, Sapphire, 18k Gold
20th Century Danish Link Bracelets
Sapphire, 18k Gold
Vintage 1940s Modern Band Rings
Star Sapphire, 18k Gold
Mid-20th Century Danish Art Nouveau Link Bracelets
Blue Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1940s Danish Art Nouveau Lever-Back Earrings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1930s Danish More Rings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Mid-20th Century Danish Art Nouveau Link Bracelets
Blue Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1950s Danish Art Nouveau Stud Earrings
Sterling Silver
Vintage 1930s Danish Art Nouveau More Rings
Sterling Silver
Vintage 1940s Danish More Earrings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
21st Century and Contemporary Danish Contemporary Brooches
Sapphire
Vintage 1950s Danish Cufflinks
Star Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1930s Danish Art Deco More Rings
Blue Sapphire, 14k Gold
Mid-20th Century Danish Art Nouveau Brooches
Blue Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1940s Danish Art Deco Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1920s Danish More Rings
Sterling Silver
1990s British Art Deco Brooches
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 9k Gold, White Gold, Yellow Gold
Georg Jensen for sale on 1stDibs
For over a century, Georg Jensen has produced some of the finest objects in Scandinavian modern design, including silver tableware, serving pieces, home decor, jewelry and more, frequently partnering with leading artisans to expand its offerings and respond to shifting tastes. Known for minimal aesthetics that reference nature, the craftsmanship of this legendary Danish silverware firm has regularly married function with thoughtful and beautiful design.
Founder Georg Jensen (1866–1935) was born in the small town of Radvaad, Denmark, and began his training as a goldsmith at 14. After studying sculpture and then training with master silversmith Mogens Ballin, he established his own silver business in Copenhagen in 1904. By 1918, the company was successful enough to open a shop in Paris.
Jensen’s firm produced an incredibly vast range of silver objects, from serving dishes and barware to centerpieces and chandeliers. For his early work, which bore ornate floral details and other organic forms of Art Nouveau, Jensen looked to the splendors of the natural world. The 1905 Blossom teapot, for instance, was topped with a magnolia bud and deftly balanced on toad feet, while some of Jensen’s best-known flatware patterns included Lily of the Valley, introduced in 1913, and Acorn, which debuted in 1915.
Collaboration with outside designers, long before such partnerships were common in design, would lead to some of the company’s most popular and enduring work of the mid-century. Sigvard Bernadotte and Vivianna Torun Bülow-Hübe created collections, as did Henning Koppel, whose curvy 1952 Pregnant Duck pitcher is a Georg Jensen classic.
After evolving and expanding throughout the 20th century, Georg Jensen was acquired by Investcorp in 2012. Today, the company is a global luxury brand with more than 1,000 stores around the world. It continues to produce seductive new pieces, such as a tea service made with Marc Newson in 2015, as well as timeless heritage designs, including the relaunch in 2019 of the 1018 solid sterling-silver Tureen 270. In 2020, the firm introduced the Jardinière 1505. Sculptural and richly decorative, the never-before-realized showpiece is hand-hammered from sheets of the finest sterling silver and is based on a 1915 sketch from Jensen’s archives.
Find an exquisite collection of Georg Jensen serveware, ceramics, silver and glass today on 1stDibs.
The Legacy of Sapphire in Jewelry Design
On 1stDibs, shop the bright blue gems that star in sapphire rings, sapphire necklaces and other vintage and antique sapphire jewelry.
Sapphires — the stone of choice for Napoleon, Princess Diana and Elizabeth Taylor — have been a favorite of aristocrats and the well-to-do since the time of the Ancient Greeks.
Picture a sapphire. If the stone you conjure is a deep cornflower blue, you’re seeing only part of the picture. Although blue Kashmirs are considered the most valuable, sapphires come in every color except red. No matter the hue, this very special gem is rich in history and beloved by royals (FYI, Princess Diana and Kate Middleton share an 11-carat sapphire engagement ring), so September babies are in very noble company.
America’s version of royalty — old money and celebrities — have also shown a predilection for the blue stones. In 1940, John D. Rockefeller Jr. had Cartier mount a 62-carat sapphire he had bought from an Indian maharajah in a brooch for his first wife, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller; in 2001, the piece sold for a then-record of $3,031,000 at Christie’s New York.
The grand dame of jewelry, Elizabeth Taylor had a passion for the gems that her lovers were happy to indulge. Second husband Michael Wilding gave her an engagement ring set with a cabochon sapphire, while Richard Burton famously presented her with a BVLGARI sautoir set with diamonds and sapphires, including at its center a cabochon Burmese weighing 52.72 carats. One of the star lots in the sale of Taylor’s jewels at the Christie’s New York in 2011, it sold for $5,906,500.
You don’t have to have blue blood or a bulging bank account, however, to get an eyeful of this much-coveted gem. A number of outstanding examples reside in public collections.
The Smithsonian Museum of Natural History owns the 423-carat Logan sapphire, a gift from the Guggenheim family, and the Hall sapphire and diamond necklace, designed by Harry Winston and featuring 36 fine, well-matched cushion-cut Sri Lankan sapphires weighing a combined 195 carats. Also in the collection is the Bismarck sapphire necklace, designed by Cartier and sporting a central sapphire weighing 98.6 carats, which Mona Von Bismarck donated to the museum.
Sapphires are composed of corundum. Their color derives from trace elements, such as iron, titanium, chromium, copper or magnesium. When the trace element produces a ruby hue, the stone is called, what else, a ruby. (which is, as mentioned above, why sapphires cannot be red by definition).
The allure of large gemstones endures throughout the periods characterized as vintage, and sapphire features frequently in vintage engagement rings. (On 1stDibs, a range of buying guides can be found for those in the market for antique engagement rings, vintage engagement rings or Art Deco engagement rings.)
Find an exquisite collection of vintage and antique sapphire jewelry on 1stDibs.
Read More
5 Fantastic Jewelry Finds, from the 19th Century to Now
Jewelry historian Vanessa Cron combed 1stDibs and selected some dazzling pieces with timeless appeal.
Jacqueline Rabun’s Fluid, Minimalist Jewelry Designs Are Inspired by Life Experiences
Motherhood is one of the influences that has shaped the longtime Georg Jensen collaborator's quietly powerful creations.

