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Collecting Fine Jewelry
The great 20th century jewelry makers such as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, and Tiffany are among the top in the field for good reason. Their history, craftsmanship and status in the canon is secure. They are rightfully among the most sought after pieces in the collector market. And their prices reflect this demand, leaving less opportunity for collectors. The sophisticated buyer, at this point, begins to look elsewhere.

Lennie Rose
May 195 min read


From Baubles to Blue-Chip: The Rise and Collectability of Costume Jewelry
Costume jewelry, non-precious, playful, and sometimes theatrical, seemed unlikely to achieve cultural significance and collectable value. Yet it has.

Lennie Rose
May 13 min read


Timeless Taste, Enduring Value
There are rooms that are simply rooms, well-appointed interiors that are tasteful and reflect the owner’s persona. Then there are rooms that become environments mixing collections, design and emerging artistry with a vision that makes them timeless.

Lennie Rose
Apr 283 min read


The Original Influencer
There is a particular kind of influence that does not announce itself. Elsie de Wolfe understood this before anyone had a word for it.

Lennie Rose
Apr 244 min read


True Luxury - Luxury Literacy
Luxury is a word of many concepts, shifting interpretations that mirror culture, wealth, time, and personal values. What once signaled excess now often signals restraint. What once required money now sometimes requires perspective.

Lennie Rose
Apr 143 min read


When Your Closet Becomes Your Collection - Luxury Literacy
To dress with intention is not simply to look good. It's to align what you wear with who you are at that moment. The outfit becomes less about presentation and more about curation. You are asking, consciously or not: What does this moment require of me? And what version of myself am I stepping into? This is where intention begins to extend beyond the wardrobe.

Lennie Rose
Apr 103 min read


How Taste is Developed - Luxury Literacy
Taste does not arrive all at once, nor does it come from simply being around beautiful things. It develops slowly, almost quietly, through a series of shifts in how you see, interpret, and choose. What people often call “becoming cultured” is less about exposure and more about learning how to perceive with precision and decide with intention. In the appraising field, we study for years and often over the course of a lifetime.

Lennie Rose
Apr 74 min read
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