View full screen - View 1 of Lot 286. Gold, Enamel, Aquamarine and Diamond Vanity Case.

Property of Christina, Charles and Philip de Limur, San Francisco, CA

Cartier

Gold, Enamel, Aquamarine and Diamond Vanity Case

Lot Closed

December 7, 06:26 PM GMT

Estimate

8,000 - 12,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

The rectangular vanity case applied with cream and blue enamel, decorated with aquamarine baguettes, old European- and single-cut diamonds, containing two powder compartments and a lipstick case.

  • Diamonds weighing a total of approximately 0.60 carat, 8 diamonds missing, 1 aquamarine missing
  • Dimensions 3⅝ x 1⅝ inches
  • Signed Cartier
  • 14 karat pink and yellow gold
  • Circa 1940

Sothebys is honored to offer a selection of jewels from the Estate of Eleanor de Limur, now property of descendants Christina, Charles and Philip de Limur, pieces of timeless style and impeccable workmanship that recall the families fabled histories. These stunning Cartier Art Déco diamond jewels evoke the glamor, romance and international interest of the courtship in Paris in the 1920's and subsequent marriage of the distinguished french Count André de Limur to Ethel Crocker in 1917. Ethel Mary Crocker was a descendant of the visionary Charles Crocker, one of the 'Big Four', founder of the western section of the first US transcontinental railroad, the Central Pacific Railroad. Crocker built a mansion in 1880 atop Nob Hill, where Grace Cathedral now sits, that was destroyed in the 1906 earthquake. Their son, Alexander Charles Crocker 'Charlie' de Limur from Paris, met and married Eleanor Spreckels Walsh 'Nonie' while in San Francisco. Eleanor, also a descendant of a storied family of the West, was the great granddaughter of Claus Spreckels the 'Sugar King'. Their union brought together the three legacy families, Crocker, Spreckles and de Limur, and with it a dazzling collection of exceptional jewels that had been passed down through generations.