Skip to main content

Oscar Heyman Sapphire Ring

to
15
109
102
94
52
2
174
162
52
29
13
133
45
4
3
3
8
23
13
21
13
122
57
3
19
16
16
15
11
to
171
1
1
26
18
12
9
2
1
182
165
17
Sort By
Oscar Heyman Natural Ceylon Sapphire and Diamond Ring
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Naples, FL
This beautiful Oscar Heyman ring holds a 12.16ct Natural, No Heat Ceylon (Sri Lanka) oval shaped
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Sri Lankan More Rings

Materials

Diamond, Sapphire, Yellow Diamond, 18k Gold, Platinum, Yellow Gold

Oscar Heyman Brothers Pink Sapphire Diamond Gold Ring
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Atlanta, GA
A platinum, 18 karat gold, pink sapphire and diamond ring by Oscar Heyman, & Brothers, set in the
Category

Late 20th Century Cocktail Rings

Materials

Diamond, Pink Sapphire, White Diamond, 18k Gold, Platinum, Yellow Gold

1968 Oscar Heyman Blue Pink Sapphire Diamond Gold Freeform Cluster Ring
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Lakewood, NJ
A superb diamond and sapphire ring in 18 karat yellow gold by Oscar Heyman Circa 1968. Contains
Category

Vintage 1960s American Cluster Rings

Materials

Diamond, Yellow Diamond, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Pink Sapphire, 18k Gold

Oscar Heyman Platinum Sapphire and Diamond Ring AGL Certified Ceylon and Burma
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Nashua, NH
Oscar Heyman Platinum Sapphire and Diamond Ring. The ring is set with one emerald cut sapphire
Category

Mid-20th Century American More Rings

Materials

Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum

Oscar Heyman Platinum 3.65 Carat Diamond 10 Carat Sapphire Dome Ladies Ring
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Dallas, TX
Circa 1970s Oscar Heyman platinum dome ring staring a 3.65 carats emerald cut diamond (K color SI1
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Fashion Rings

Materials

Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Platinum

OSCAR HEYMAN Collection for Shreve, Crump Low
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Chestnut Hill, MA
Part of the OSCAR HEYMAN Collection for Shreve, Crump & Low, this ring characterizes the timeless
Category

20th Century American Three-Stone Rings

Materials

Sapphire, Diamond, Platinum

Oscar Heyman Diamond and Sapphire Dome Ring
Located in San Francisco, CA
white diamonds and brilliant blue baguette sapphires create this renowned classic design. Timeless. Ring
Category

Vintage 1950s American Cluster Rings

Materials

Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum

Impressive Oscar Heyman Diamond Sapphire Brooch Ring Set
Located in New York , NY
) and a cocktail design ring (approximately 6 ct diamonds and blue and pink sapphires)
Category

Vintage 1970s American Brooches

Materials

18k Gold

Platinum Oscar Heyman Peridot and Sapphire Domed Ring
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Dallas, TX
This platinum Oscar Heyman domed ring features an approximately 3.46 carat emerald cut peridot at
Category

Vintage 1980s Modern Dome Rings

Materials

Peridot, Sapphire, Platinum

18 Karat Yellow Gold Band Ring with Square Cut Blue Sapphires by Oscar Heyman
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Chicago, IL
Oscar Heyman, 18K yellow gold band ring set with 6 square cut blue sapphires weighing 1.26cts
Category

Vintage 1970s American Contemporary Band Rings

Materials

Blue Sapphire, Yellow Gold

OSCAR HEYMAN Collection for Shreve, Crump and Low
By Oscar Heyman
Located in Chestnut Hill, MA
An Oscar Heyman beautifully platinum set aquamarine, diamond and sapphire ring consisting of one
Category

20th Century American Dome Rings

Materials

Aquamarine, Sapphire, Diamond, Platinum

  • 1
Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Oscar Heyman Sapphire Ring", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Oscar Heyman Sapphire Ring For Sale on 1stDibs

You are likely to find exactly the oscar heyman sapphire ring you’re looking for on 1stDibs, as there is a broad range for sale. Every item for sale was constructed with extraordinary care, often using Platinum, Gold and 18k Gold. You can easily find a 140 antique edition and 23 modern creations to choose from as well. Finding the perfect oscar heyman sapphire ring may mean sifting through those created during different time periods — you can find an early version that dates to the 20th Century and a newer variation that were made as recently as the 21st Century. For this particular accessory, there are many different carat weights to choose from, but 1 Carat and 1.5 Carat versions are of considerable interest. Today, if you’re looking for a round cut version of this piece and are unable to find the perfect match, our selection also includes baguette cut and cushion cut alternatives. If you’re browsing our inventory for a oscar heyman sapphire ring, you’ll find that many are available today for women, but there are still pieces to choose from for unisex and men.

How Much is a Oscar Heyman Sapphire Ring?

Prices for a oscar heyman sapphire ring can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — at 1stDibs, these accessories begin at $1,700 and can go as high as $675,000, while this accessory, on average, fetches $8,995.

Oscar Heyman for sale on 1stDibs

Known as “the jewelers’ jeweler,” Oscar Heyman (1888–1970) designed pieces for Cartier, Tiffany Co., Van Cleef Arpels, Harry Winston and Black, Starr Frost. The family-run Oscar Heyman Brothers jewelry company was founded by Heyman with his brothers Nathan and Harry in 1912. Jewelers from Latvia, they had trained at their great-uncle’s workshop, which had clients including Russian imperial jeweler Fabergé, before immigrating to the United States in the early 1900s.

After arriving in New York, Oscar worked with Pierre Cartier and Nathan was a tool maker at Western Electric before they came together to open their jewelry business. Highly skilled craftsmen, the Heyman brothers quickly developed a roster of high-profile clients — primarily big-name jewelers — drawn to their work with dazzling stones and meticulous design. In 1917, Black, Starr Frost commissioned the brothers to design an American flag brooch, which would become a recurring motif in the Oscar Heyman Brothers portfolio. They also designed the Pansy brooch in the 1930s, another long-popular accessory that was produced exclusively for Tiffany Co. toward the end of the 20th century. After Heyman designed for four of the five jewelers on view at the 1939 World’s Fair House of Jewels (Cartier, Udall Ballou, Marcus Co. and Black, Starr Frost), the company was given the moniker “the jewelers’ jeweler.”

Heyman Brothers later designed gem-encrusted medallions that traveled to the moon on Apollo 16, the necklace setting for the 69-carat diamond Richard Burton gave Elizabeth Taylor in 1969 and even a pair of ruby-encrusted Stuart Weitzman stilettos in 2003. Over the years, the company has entranced such clients as Evelyn Lauder, Marjorie Merriweather Post, Billy Porter and Tina Fey with its pieces.

In 2012, the century-old jeweler underwent a rebranding to simplify its name to Oscar Heyman and today is still run by the Heyman family, which manages the whole process from alloying their own metal to cutting and polishing their gemstones to assembling the final product in-house. In 2017, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston published a monograph authored by Yvonne J. Markowitz and Elizabeth Hamilton that details for a broader audience the history of Oscar Heyman, an unsung company that’s long been behind some of the biggest names in jewelry.

Shop authentic Oscar Heyman rings, brooches and bracelets 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 ringsvintage engagement rings or Art Deco engagement rings.)  

Find an exquisite collection of vintage and antique sapphire jewelry on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Rings for You

Antique and vintage rings have long held a special place in the hearts of fine jewelry lovers all over the world.

No matter their origin or specific characteristics, rings are timeless, versatile accessories. They’ve carried deep meaning since at least the Middle Ages, when diamond rings symbolized strength and other kinds of rings were worn to signify romantic feelings or to denote an affiliation with a religious order. Rings have also forever been emblematic of eternity.

Over time, rings have frequently taken the form of serpents, which have long been associated with eternal life, health and renewal. Italian luxury jewelry house Bulgari has become famous for its widely loved Serpenti motif, for example, and its Serpenti ring, like the other accessories in the collection, began as an homage to jewelry of the Roman and Hellenistic eras. The serpent is now a popular motif in fine jewelry. Jewelry devotees have long pined for rings adorned with reptiles, thanks to antique Victorian rings — well, specifically, Queen Victoria’s illustrious engagement ring, which took the form of a gold snake set with rubies, diamonds and an emerald (her birthstone). Designs for Victorian-era engagement rings often featured repoussé work and chasing, in which patterns are hammered into the metal.

Engagement rings, which are reliably intimidating to shop for, are still widely recognized as symbols of love and commitment. On 1stDibs, a range of buying guides can be found for those in the market for antique engagement ringsvintage engagement rings or Art Deco engagement rings

The most collectible antique engagement rings and vintage engagement rings are those from the Victorian, Edwardian and Art Deco eras. Named for the monarchies of the four King Georges, who in succession ruled England starting in 1714 (plus King William’s reign), antique Georgian rings, be they engagement rings or otherwise, are also coveted by collectors. Pearls, along with colored gemstones like garnets, rubies and sapphires, were widely used in Georgian jewelry. The late-1700s paste jewelry was a predecessor to what we now call fashion or costume jewelry

The Art Nouveau movement (1880–1910) brought with it rings inspired by the natural world. Antique Art Nouveau rings might feature depictions of winged insects and fauna as well as women, who were simultaneously eroticized and romanticized, frequently with long flowing hair. Art Deco jewelry, on the other hand, which originated during the 1920s and ’30s, is by and large “white jewelry.” White metals, primarily platinum, were favored over yellow gold in the design of antique Art Deco rings and other accessories as well as geometric motifs, with women drawn to the era’s dazzling cocktail rings in particular.

Whether you’re hunting down a chunky classic for a Prohibition-themed cocktail party or seeking a clean contemporary design to complement your casual ensemble, find an exquisite collection of antique, new and vintage rings on 1stDibs.