Tiffany Sapphire Earrings
1990s Italian Retro Drop Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
1990s Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
20th Century Drop Earrings
Sapphire, Gold, 14k Gold
20th Century Drop Earrings
Pearl, Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Drop Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
2010s American Contemporary Stud Earrings
Diamond, Blue Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Sapphire, Platinum
20th Century American Modern Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold
Vintage 1950s American Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Emerald, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Contemporary Stud Earrings
Sapphire, Platinum
20th Century Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 14k Gold
Vintage 1960s American Art Deco Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, White Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Gold, White Gold, Platinum
Vintage 1960s American Modernist Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, White Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Gold, Yellow Gold, 18k ...
Vintage 1960s American Retro Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, White Diamond, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow ...
20th Century American Retro Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold
Vintage 1970s Clip-on Earrings
Pink Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Dangle Earrings
Sapphire, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
Late 20th Century Modern Stud Earrings
Pink Sapphire, Sterling Silver
2010s Japanese Art Nouveau Stud Earrings
Blue Sapphire, 18k Gold
Late 20th Century Clip-on Earrings
Early 2000s Unknown Contemporary Stud Earrings
Peridot, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Tourmaline, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold, Sil...
2010s American Contemporary Stud Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Early 2000s American Artist Bangles
Diamond, Pink Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Spinel, Platinum
20th Century American Retro Brooches
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold
Recent Sales
Vintage 1950s Art Deco Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 14k Gold, White Gold
1990s American Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Emerald, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Hoop Earrings
White Diamond, Blue Sapphire
Vintage 1960s Art Deco Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 14k Gold, Sterling Silver
Vintage 1960s Clip-on Earrings
Blue Sapphire, White Diamond, White Gold
Vintage 1980s Unknown Clip-on Earrings
Pink Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold
Late 20th Century Retro Stud Earrings
Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1930s Unknown Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, White Gold, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Contemporary Dangle Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Victorian Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
Vintage 1960s American Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold
20th Century American Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Drop Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
1990s American Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Lever-Back Earrings
White Diamond, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Platinum
1990s Contemporary Stud Earrings
Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Modern More Earrings
Sapphire, Diamond, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Late 20th Century American More Earrings
Aquamarine, Blue Sapphire, 14k Gold, White Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire
Vintage 1970s Unknown Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
Vintage 1950s American Clip-on Earrings
Ruby, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Unknown Modern Stud Earrings
Blue Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Clip-on Earrings
Agate, Blue Sapphire, 18k Gold
Late 20th Century Clip-on Earrings
Blue Sapphire, Diamond, 18k Gold
Vintage 1960s American Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Early 20th Century American Modern Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Dangle Earrings
Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Platinum
1990s North American Drop Earrings
Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Platinum
Late 20th Century Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Dangle Earrings
Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Stud Earrings
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
20th Century Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Gold
Vintage 1980s Unknown Retro Drop Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Gold, 14k Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1980s American Lever-Back Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Yellow Sapphire, Platinum
Mid-20th Century Retro Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1920s Art Deco Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Pink Sapphire, Platinum
Late 20th Century Contemporary Drop Earrings
Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Diamond, Pink Sapphire, Platinum
Late 20th Century Stud Earrings
White Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary American Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
Late 20th Century Chandelier Earrings
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, Gold
Late 20th Century Contemporary Stud Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1980s American Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Stud Earrings
Blue Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Romantic Lever-Back Earrings
Blue Sapphire, Sapphire, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Unknown Contemporary Dangle Earrings
Garnet, Sapphire, Spinel, Fire Opal, Yellow Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1940s Retro Clip-on Earrings
Moonstone, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Gold, Yellow Gold
20th Century American Retro Stud Earrings
Diamond, Onyx, Pink Sapphire, Tourmaline, Platinum
Vintage 1960s American Clip-on Earrings
Sapphire, 18k Gold
20th Century Retro Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1960s Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Platinum
Mid-20th Century American Retro Lever-Back Earrings
Diamond, Blue Sapphire, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Lever-Back Earrings
Pearl, Sapphire
Mid-20th Century American Retro Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, Sapphire, Gold, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1980s American Dangle Earrings
Agate, Iolite, Blue Sapphire, Tourmaline, Gold, 18k Gold
Vintage 1940s Retro Clip-on Earrings
Moonstone, Blue Sapphire, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
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21st Century and Contemporary French Top Handle Bags
21st Century and Contemporary American Contemporary Cocktail Rings
Diamond, Pearl, South Sea Pearl, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1970s Italian Retro Stud Earrings
Diamond, Pearl, 18k Gold, White Gold
Vintage 1980s Italian Classical Greek Clip-on Earrings
Gold
21st Century and Contemporary American Contemporary Stud Earrings
Turquoise, 22k Gold
1990s Art Deco Wrist Watches
18k Gold
Late 20th Century Stud Earrings
Diamond, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Portuguese Contemporary Drop Earrings
Diamond, White Diamond, Gold, White Gold
Vintage 1980s Clip-on Earrings
Diamond, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Vintage 1960s French Dangle Earrings
Diamond, Turquoise, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary English Stud Earrings
Diamond, Ruby, 18k Gold, White Gold
1990s American Drop Earrings
Diamond, Gold, Platinum
1990s Cocktail Rings
Aquamarine, Diamond, Ruby, Yellow Gold
20th Century Italian More Earrings
Gold
20th Century French More Necklaces
Diamond, Platinum
Late 20th Century Art Deco Drop Earrings
Diamond, Turquoise, Platinum
Tiffany Sapphire Earrings For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much are Tiffany Sapphire Earrings?
Tiffany Co. for sale on 1stDibs
Tiffany Co. is one of the most prominent purveyors of luxury goods in the United States, and has long been an important arbiter of style in the design of diamond engagement rings. A young Franklin Delano Roosevelt proposed to his future wife, Eleanor, with a Tiffany ring in 1904. Vanderbilts, Whitneys, Astors and members of the Russian imperial family all wore Tiffany Co. jewelry. And Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis preferred Tiffany china for state dinners at the White House.
Although synonymous with luxury today, the firm started out rather modestly. Charles Lewis Tiffany and John B. Young founded it in Connecticut as a “stationery and fancy goods emporium” in 1837, at a time when European imports still dominated the nascent American luxury market. In 1853, Charles Tiffany — who in 1845 had launched the company’s famed catalog, the Blue Book, and with it, the firm’s signature robin’s-egg blue, which he chose for the cover — shifted the focus to fine jewelry.
In 1868, Tiffany Co. gained international recognition when it became the first U.S. firm to win an award for excellence in silverware at the Exposition Universelle in Paris. From then on, it belonged to the pantheon of American luxury brands.
At the start of the Gilded Age, in 1870, Tiffany Co. opened its flagship store, described as a "palace of jewels" by the New York Times, at 15 Union Square West in Manhattan. Throughout this period, its designs for silver tableware, ceremonial silver, flatware and jewelry were highly sought-after indicators of status and taste. They also won the firm numerous accolades, including the grand prize for silverware at the Paris Exposition of 1878. Among the firm’s glittering creations from this time are masterworks of Art Nouveau jewelry, such as this delicate aquamarine necklace and this lavish plique-à-jour peridot and gold necklace, both circa 1900.
When Charles Lewis Tiffany died, in 1902, his son Louis Comfort Tiffany became the firm’s design director. Under his leadership, the Tiffany silver studio was a de facto design school for apprentice silversmiths, who worked alongside head artisan Edward C. Moore. The firm produced distinctive objects inspired by Japanese art and design, North American plants and flowers, and Native American patterns and crafts, adding aesthetic diversity to Tiffany Co.’s distinguished repertoire.
Tiffany is also closely associated with diamonds, even lending its name to one particularly rare and exceptional yellow stone. The firm bought the Tiffany diamond in its raw state from the Kimberley mines of South Africa in 1878. Cut to create a 128.54-carat gem with an unprecedented 82 facets, it is one of the most spectacular examples of a yellow diamond in the world.
In a broader sense, Tiffany Co. helped put diamonds on the map in 1886 by introducing the American marketplace to the solitaire diamond design, which is still among the most popular engagement-ring styles. The trademark Tiffany® Setting raises the stone above the band on six prongs, allowing its facets to catch the light. A lovely recent example is this circa-2000 platinum engagement ring. Displaying a different design and aesthetic (but equally chic) is this exquisite diamond and ruby ring from the 1930s.
Find Tiffany Co. jewelry, serveware and decorative objects for sale 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.
Finding the Right Earrings for You
In the United States, ear piercing didn’t really become popular until the 1950s and ‘60s, but our desire for a dazzling pair of vintage earrings has deeper roots than that. In fact, wearing earrings actually goes back thousands of years, and you can find many tangible connections between now and then in how we continue to talk about these treasured accessories.
Women wore ornamental earrings — studs and hoops at the very least — in Ancient Egypt, which is home to mines that are among the earliest sources of emeralds in the world. Emerald earrings are highly prized today, and their quality lies in their rich, saturated color. The highest-quality emeralds are green or bluish-green. Earrings worn by the affluent in early Roman civilizations were set with precious stones such as diamonds and pearls, and a clean-looking pop of pearl on the front of the lobe is as timeless as ever. Hoop earrings are imbued with symbolism and cultural significance for many, and on view in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Ancient Near Eastern Art Gallery is a pair of simple gold hoops from Mesopotamia dating to between 2600 and 2500 B.C.
Today, ear piercing is very popular all over the world, and, as a result, it is difficult to overstate how much everyone pines for a good pair of earrings — modernist drop earrings, glamorous Victorian hoops, geometrically complex chandelier earrings, you name it. Sure, jewelry trends and the fashion darlings of social media come and go, but earrings have a staying power that seems impenetrable: The still-strong love affair between British royals and Cartier earrings is more than a century old, glossy 1970s hoops from legacy houses such as Bulgari and Van Cleef Arpels remain the statement makers they’ve always been and although people have been stacking earrings for many moons, the allure of an expertly mismatched stack of charms and studs still feels fresh and new.
While there is no shortage of modern earring designs to choose from, the classics, like coral earrings, Art Deco–style earrings and diamond drop earrings are still heavy hitters. On 1stDibs, find a wide range of antique, new and vintage earrings today.
- 1stDibs ExpertAugust 17, 2021A Tiffany Co. engagement ring can cost as little as $13,000 or as much as $500,000 depending on the center stone’s carat weight, the band material and whether or not there are any side stones. The smaller the stone, the cheaper the ring will be. Find engagement rings designed by Tiffany Co. on 1stDibs.













