It is an interesting fact that Faberge eggs are made of gold, enamel, and precious gems inside. Originally, it was a closely guarded secret. Inside, each contained a surprise. Each egg was a masterpiece. In 1891, for example, Fabergé presented the Azova egg, carved from a solid piece of green jasper and covered with gold and diamond scrollwork in Louis XV style.
no. They are jewel encrusted pieces in the general shape of an egg.
Technically yes, Farbergé still makes jewellery, and Fabergé egg is one of the items that they make. You can find them at their homepage farberge.com
They get this really rich chicken to make one
Some if not all combinations of gold, silver, copper, nickel, and palladium decorated with precious stones including diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and sapphires.
Faberge eggs were made by a craftsman for a Russian Tsar to give to his family, for Easter.
Because they where
Alexander the third wanted to give a unique special present to his wife so he requested a Faberge egg.
The Faberge eggs were made as Easter gifts from the Tzar to his wife. The Russian royal family was Russian Orthodox religion. They were made by the jeweler Faberge out of diamonds, gems, pearls, and enameled. They had little special things inside of them.
normal sized
This is tough, as only 50 of these jewelled Faberge eggs were made, and only 42 of them survived. There is an option to have it valued online by a specialist, but this will take up to 24 hours to complete.
in 1885
The most expensive as determined by sale at auction is the Rothschild egg. The goldsmith/jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé was the head of the House of Fabergé and the leading artisan that produced the eggs.
I believe it was Carl Faberge, of the House of Faberge, who made these "Faberge eggs" as they are usually called. See the Related Link below for the Wikipedia entry on the Faberge eggs.
56 total
Faberge.
The Faberge eggs were made as Easter gifts from the Tzar to his wife. The Russian royal family was Russian Orthodox religion. They were made by the jeweler Faberge out of diamonds, gems, pearls, and enameled. They had little special things inside of them.
normal sized
No, Tsar Alexander III was the Emperor of Russia who commissioned the eggs to be made by the House of Fabergé.
Faberge eggs are essentially 'dioramas' -- three-dimensional miniatures made from metal and set with precious stones. Faberge was the court jeweler to the Czar of the Russian Empire. Extensive planning and drawing precedes any fabrication, then the process of fashioning the metal, applying any enamel and setting jewels into the 'structure' ensues. You can read more, below.
This is tough, as only 50 of these jewelled Faberge eggs were made, and only 42 of them survived. There is an option to have it valued online by a specialist, but this will take up to 24 hours to complete.
in 1885
The famous Easter eggs for the Russian royal family were made by the House of Fabergé, a renowned Russian jewelry firm. Specifically, they were crafted by Peter Carl Fabergé and his team of skilled artisans. These eggs, known as Fabergé eggs, were intricately designed and adorned with precious metals and gemstones.
Peter Carl Fabergé first designed the Faberge egg for Czar Alexander III to give to his wife
Now, if you are certain that it is a real Faberge egg, than it should be worth between $4,000 to $75,000.Is excellent for investmentAnswerI sell four eggs of Faberge by Franklin Mint that only the real one with 24k gold,enamel,pearl and hand decorations for 25000 in December and was easy because Faberge Eggs by Franklin mint dont make more and they have only the authorization to make by the House of Faberge. I am looking for Eggs Limited editionAnswerWhat you are referring to are eggs made by the House of Faberge and sold through FM. In 1988 they would have been about 4K. The jewels on these are not glass. I have seen one sell for about 7K a couple of months ago.