British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
WILSON & GILL
139, Regent street, London
Wilson & Gill - London - 1915
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139, Regent street, London
Wilson & Gill - London - 1915
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
CARRINGTON & Co. Ltd.
130, Regent street, London
Carrington & Co. Ltd. - London - 1941
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130, Regent street, London
Carrington & Co. Ltd. - London - 1941
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
SPINK & SON, Ltd.
17-18, Piccadilly, London
Spink & Son, Ltd. - London - 1915
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17-18, Piccadilly, London
Spink & Son, Ltd. - London - 1915
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
BOTLY & LEWIS
25, King Street, Reading
Botly & Lewis - Reading - 1916
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25, King Street, Reading
Botly & Lewis - Reading - 1916
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
THE GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS COMPANY LIMITED
112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1915
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112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1915
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
THE GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS COMPANY LIMITED
112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1916
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112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1916
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
HARROD'S
London
The Fashion for Regimental Badge Brooches
It will probably, and frequently, happen also that the absent men will commission you to choose, on their behalf, the belated Christmas or New Year gift which war conditions make it impossible for them to select and present to you in person as usual.
In which case—or, indeed, in any case —nothing could well be a happier choice than one of the regimental badge brooches of which a most interesting display is being shown in the splendid jewellery department at Harrod’s in the Brompton Road, S.W. Every regiment is represented by these beautifully-made things, the colourings being introduced by enamel and the use of diamonds sometimes making the device even more decorative. So that they are one and all things of beauty, though quite apart from this, I should think that every woman who has the right to wear such a badge brooch would be glad and proud to do so, seeing that it proclaims to the world that her man is doing his duty to his King and his country.
Naturally, too, the soldiers who have the opportunity to make their own choice of a parting gift will be specially glad to be able to secure something which is of both personal and patriotic interest, so that—as usual—Harrod’s have done the right thing in bringing out these military brooches.
Failing a visit to the showrooms, however, to see them, the next best thing will be to make application for the special list which shows the brooches in their actual size and colouring, the illustrations here, though necessarily lacking this latter and realistic charm, being helpful to choice as showing the decorativeness of the designs.
The prices may well be noted, and their moderation appreciated, that first brooch —the Bays—with its wreath of green laurel leaves and the touch of scarlet flaming through the golden crown at the top, costing only £5, and then the 9th Lancers badge and brooch being £1 15s., and cheap at that inasmuch as the figure 9 is ablaze in diamonds, and the rest of the design a bravery of scarlet and white and gold.
Next in their due order you have the Prince of Wales’s feathers surmounted by the crown for £4, and the entwined letters of diamonds and crown of gold for £1 ; and the legend of the Life Guards blazoned in letters of gold on the brilliant blue enamel, and the crown in its scarlet and gold surmounted by a lion, for £3 10s. The badge brooch of the 13th Hussars entails an expenditure of 8 guineas, as being rather more elaborate and again introducing diamond-lettered figures, the 2nd Life Guards, on the other hand, only costs £2 12s. 6d., and the King’s Royal Rifle Corps., in which blue is the dominant colour — though white and a flash of scarlet and a glint of gold are all there too —£4 5s.
As to the links, they are priced respectively at £6 2s. 6d. and £5 5s., and you may like to know that scarf pins are also available, one very effective thing being dedicated to the 16th Lancers, the figures in closely-set diamonds and the crossed pennants being ablaze in scarlet and white and gold.
Now if you want any further reason to go to Harrods (though the average woman can always offer a hundred and one, all equally good!) you will surely find it in the fact that the great one-week sale starts there on Monday, January 11th, and ends on Saturday, the 16th. For while the days are thus limited, the bargains are absolutely unlimited and altogether wonderful; so much so, indeed, that these eagerly-awaited half-yearly functions are always attended by hundreds of women who make special journeys from all parts of the country in order to lay in stores of provisions as well as clothes while prices are all so greatly and advantageously reduced. It has paid them well to do so in the past, but this year it will be a more profitable proceeding than ever before, the stock being larger and the reductions much greater, an inevitable result of the effect of the war on the trade of the past few months.
So, of course, if the sale is sufficiently magnetic to draw women all the way from the provinces, it must surely attract every woman in London and the suburbs.
Indeed, it would be impossible to stay away when once you are aware of what awaits you in the way of bargains, and as the necessary knowledge is ready to be imparted by a sale catalogue which you can all have for the asking, no one can plead ignorance as an excuse for missing one of the greatest sales and opportunities of a lifetime.
Source: The Badminton Magazine - January 1915
Trev.
London
The Fashion for Regimental Badge Brooches
It will probably, and frequently, happen also that the absent men will commission you to choose, on their behalf, the belated Christmas or New Year gift which war conditions make it impossible for them to select and present to you in person as usual.
In which case—or, indeed, in any case —nothing could well be a happier choice than one of the regimental badge brooches of which a most interesting display is being shown in the splendid jewellery department at Harrod’s in the Brompton Road, S.W. Every regiment is represented by these beautifully-made things, the colourings being introduced by enamel and the use of diamonds sometimes making the device even more decorative. So that they are one and all things of beauty, though quite apart from this, I should think that every woman who has the right to wear such a badge brooch would be glad and proud to do so, seeing that it proclaims to the world that her man is doing his duty to his King and his country.
Naturally, too, the soldiers who have the opportunity to make their own choice of a parting gift will be specially glad to be able to secure something which is of both personal and patriotic interest, so that—as usual—Harrod’s have done the right thing in bringing out these military brooches.
Failing a visit to the showrooms, however, to see them, the next best thing will be to make application for the special list which shows the brooches in their actual size and colouring, the illustrations here, though necessarily lacking this latter and realistic charm, being helpful to choice as showing the decorativeness of the designs.
The prices may well be noted, and their moderation appreciated, that first brooch —the Bays—with its wreath of green laurel leaves and the touch of scarlet flaming through the golden crown at the top, costing only £5, and then the 9th Lancers badge and brooch being £1 15s., and cheap at that inasmuch as the figure 9 is ablaze in diamonds, and the rest of the design a bravery of scarlet and white and gold.
Next in their due order you have the Prince of Wales’s feathers surmounted by the crown for £4, and the entwined letters of diamonds and crown of gold for £1 ; and the legend of the Life Guards blazoned in letters of gold on the brilliant blue enamel, and the crown in its scarlet and gold surmounted by a lion, for £3 10s. The badge brooch of the 13th Hussars entails an expenditure of 8 guineas, as being rather more elaborate and again introducing diamond-lettered figures, the 2nd Life Guards, on the other hand, only costs £2 12s. 6d., and the King’s Royal Rifle Corps., in which blue is the dominant colour — though white and a flash of scarlet and a glint of gold are all there too —£4 5s.
As to the links, they are priced respectively at £6 2s. 6d. and £5 5s., and you may like to know that scarf pins are also available, one very effective thing being dedicated to the 16th Lancers, the figures in closely-set diamonds and the crossed pennants being ablaze in scarlet and white and gold.
Now if you want any further reason to go to Harrods (though the average woman can always offer a hundred and one, all equally good!) you will surely find it in the fact that the great one-week sale starts there on Monday, January 11th, and ends on Saturday, the 16th. For while the days are thus limited, the bargains are absolutely unlimited and altogether wonderful; so much so, indeed, that these eagerly-awaited half-yearly functions are always attended by hundreds of women who make special journeys from all parts of the country in order to lay in stores of provisions as well as clothes while prices are all so greatly and advantageously reduced. It has paid them well to do so in the past, but this year it will be a more profitable proceeding than ever before, the stock being larger and the reductions much greater, an inevitable result of the effect of the war on the trade of the past few months.
So, of course, if the sale is sufficiently magnetic to draw women all the way from the provinces, it must surely attract every woman in London and the suburbs.
Indeed, it would be impossible to stay away when once you are aware of what awaits you in the way of bargains, and as the necessary knowledge is ready to be imparted by a sale catalogue which you can all have for the asking, no one can plead ignorance as an excuse for missing one of the greatest sales and opportunities of a lifetime.
Source: The Badminton Magazine - January 1915
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
ARMY AND NAVY STORES, Ltd.
London
Examples from the Army and Navy Stores, Ltd. catalogue of 1939:
Army and Navy Stores Ltd. - London - 1939
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London
Examples from the Army and Navy Stores, Ltd. catalogue of 1939:
Army and Navy Stores Ltd. - London - 1939
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
GARRARD & Co. Ltd.
112, Regent Street, London
Garrard & Co. Ltd. - London - 1966
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112, Regent Street, London
Garrard & Co. Ltd. - London - 1966
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
THE GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS COMPANY LIMITED
112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1931
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112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1931
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
A.W. CROSBEE & Co., later, A.W. CROSBEE & SONS Ltd.
7, Vyse Street, Birmingham
A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. - Birmingham - 1932
Arthur Walter Crosbee trading as A.W. Crosbee & Co., later, A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. entered their marks with the Birmingham and Chester assay offices.
The firms name was restyled from A.W. Crosbee & Co., to, A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. sometime between 1911 and 1926.
A.W.C & S.Ltd
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7, Vyse Street, Birmingham
A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. - Birmingham - 1932
Arthur Walter Crosbee trading as A.W. Crosbee & Co., later, A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. entered their marks with the Birmingham and Chester assay offices.
The firms name was restyled from A.W. Crosbee & Co., to, A.W. Crosbee & Sons Ltd. sometime between 1911 and 1926.
A.W.C & S.Ltd
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
HARRODS Ltd.
London
A page from the catalogue of Harrods Ltd. c.1912:
Harrods Ltd. - London - c.1912
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London
A page from the catalogue of Harrods Ltd. c.1912:
Harrods Ltd. - London - c.1912
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
CHARLES PACKER & Co.
London
Charles Packer & Co. - London - 1916
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London
Charles Packer & Co. - London - 1916
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
CHARLES PACKER & Co. Ltd.
London
Charles Packer & Co. Ltd. - London - 1919
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London
Charles Packer & Co. Ltd. - London - 1919
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
THE GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS COMPANY LIMITED
112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1951
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112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1951
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
Birks-Ellis-Ryrie Limited - Toronto - 1937
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
THE GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS COMPANY LIMITED
112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1930
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112, Regent Street, London
The Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Company Ltd. - London - 1930
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
MAPPIN & WEBB Ltd.
London
Mappin & Webb Ltd. - London - 1916
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London
Mappin & Webb Ltd. - London - 1916
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
CHARLES PACKER & Co. Ltd.
London
Charles Packer & Co. Ltd. - London - 1920
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London
Charles Packer & Co. Ltd. - London - 1920
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Re: British and Commonwealth Military Related Jewellery
CHARLES PACKER & Co.
London
Charles Packer & Co. - London - 1915
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London
Charles Packer & Co. - London - 1915
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