Harry Winston

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Harry Winston (March 1, 1896 – December 8, 1978) was an American jeweller. He donated the Hope Diamond to the Smithsonian Institution in 1958 after owning it for a decade, and later donated the Portuguese Diamond as well. He once sent a 726-carat (145 g) rough diamond, the Jonker, through the U.S. Mail, instead of a conventional means of secure transfer.

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History

Harry Winston's father Jacob started a small jewelry business after he and Harry's mother immigrated to the United States from the Ukraine, so Harry had an in right from the start. He worked in his father's shop growing up, and legend has it that when he was just 12 years old, he recognized a two-carat emerald in a pawn shop, bought it for 25 cents, and sold it two days later for $800.[1]

Winston's jewelry empire began with his acquisition of Arabella Huntington's famous jewelry collection. The wife of railroad magnate Henry Huntington, Arabella amassed one of the world's most prestigious collections of jewelry, largely from Parisian jewelers such as Cartier.

When Winston purchased the collection after her death, the designs of the collection were quite old fashioned. Winston redesigned the jewelry into more contemporary styles and showcased his unique skill at jewelry crafting. According to the Huntington museum, "He frequently boasted that Arabella's famous necklace of pearls now adorned the necks of at least two­ dozen women around the world."

Winston has said: "People will stare. Make it worth their while."

Winston was among the most famous jewelers in the world, well-known to the general public. In the 1953 musical film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, the song "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" includes the spoken interjection "Talk to me, Harry Winston, tell me all about it!" The Lauren Weisberger comic novel Chasing Harry Winston was published in May 2008.

Today, the Harry Winston Diamond Corporation operates seven salons in the U.S., in New York, Beverly Hills, Las Vegas, Dallas, Honolulu, Bal Harbour, and Chicago, and ten salons in other countries. Harry's son Ronald Winston plays a managerial part in the company.

Notoriety

On July 14, 2008, art curator Jack Armstrong filed a lawsuit against Harry Winston, Inc. and its Vice President Goli Parstabar in a Los Angeles Superior Court alleging that Winston was holding the Black Star Sapphire of Queensland hostage. Armstrong claims that he is the owner of the famed gem which is considered the largest and most valuable of its kind at 733 carats. Armstrong had the valuable jewel shipped to Winston for safekeeping. When he arrived to retrieve it, Winston refused to release it. Armstrong was quoted in one instance as saying, "I was born in Kansas. If something like this happened in Wichita, someone would have gone to jail!" Armstrong's attorney is Hollywood lawyer, Devin Weisberg.

On 4 December 2008, the Harry Winston boutique at 29 Avenue Montaigne (corner of Rue Clément Marot) in Paris was robbed of more than Euro €80 million (about USD$100 million) worth of "diamond rings, necklaces and luxury watches" by a "gang of three or four" armed men just before closing. At least two of the thieves were men wearing "wigs and women's clothes."[2] The store had also been robbed in October 2007, when a similar heist at opening time on a Saturday netted the robbers about €20 million[3]

Important diamonds Winston owned[4]

Salons

References

  1. ^ http://www.zimbio.com/100+Most+Influential+People+in+Fashion/articles/259/Fashion+Influential+28+Harry+Winston
  2. ^ Robbers take €80 million in Paris jewelry theft, Associated Press/International Herald Tribune, 5 December 2008
  3. ^ Thieves take €20 million in jewels in Paris heist, International Herald Tribune, 11 October 2007, accessed 5 December 2008
  4. ^ "Harry Winston The Ultimate Jeweler", third edition, 1988, by Laurence S. Krashes, edited by Ronald Winston. ISBN 0-87311-018-8

External links