View full screen - View 1 of Lot 147. A JEWELLED 9 CT GOLD CIGARETTE CASE, CARTIER, LONDON, 1942.

A JEWELLED 9 CT GOLD CIGARETTE CASE, CARTIER, LONDON, 1942

Lot Closed

September 9, 03:24 PM GMT

Estimate

2,000 - 3,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

A JEWELLED 9 CT GOLD CIGARETTE CASE, CARTIER, LONDON, 1942


rectangular, the reeded engine-turned lid with a pointed sliding 'panther skin' thumbpiece set with rose diamonds and crescent moon-shaped onyx, lobed sides, interior of lid with inscription, fully hallmarked


8.1cm., 3¼in. wide


Please note: Condition 11 of the Conditions of Business for Buyers (Online Only) is not applicable to this lot.


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Please note that the hallmarks for this cigarette case include the one for 9ct gold.

The inscription, in facsimile of handwriting reading '18 Jan 1933-43,' records that this cigarette case was a 10th anniversary gift commemorating the marriage on 18 January 1933 at St. Margaret's, Westminster of Sir Hugh Houston Smiley, 3rd Bt. (1905-1990) and Nancy Elizabeth Louise Hardy (1909-1999), elder daughter of Ernest Walter Hardy Beaton and his wife, Esther (née Sisson). The wedding, at which Miss Beaton's younger sister, Baba (Barbara Jessica Hardy Beaton / Mrs. Alec Hambro, 1912-1973) was one of the bridesmaids, was designed and organised by the Beaton sisters' elder brother, Cecil, later Sir Cecil (1904-1980), the celebrated photographer and socialite. The Sketch (London, Wednesday, 25 January 1933, p. 139) noted that, 'The Wedding of Miss Nancy Beaton and Sir Hugh Smiley, Bt., was a ''snow-white Christmas-Fairy'' scene. The bride's dress of white chiffon, powdered with shimmering sequins and trimmed with ermine, had a train to match. The bridesmaids . . . wore white chiffon and were ''roped together'' with garlands of white flowers. The [three] pages . . . were in white satin knee-breeches, with sky-blue velvet coats.' The bride's bouquet was of lilies-of-the-valley and stephanotis tied with blue ribbons.

The thumbpiece of this case is decorated in Cartier's so-called ‘panther skin’ design. These abstract designs in diamonds and onyx became fashionable as early as the First World War; 'Panther skin' first appeared on a wristwatch in 1914, and a year later a watch pendant was decorated with the design (Hans Nadelhofer, Cartier, Jewelers Extraordinary, 1984, p. 229).