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JAY STRONGWATER 24"H xm15"W CORDELIA CURIO Cabinet SWAROVSKI Crystal

$ 752.4

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: Open box
  • Item Width (Interior): 15 in
  • Number of Doors: 1
  • Item Height: 24"
  • Item Length (Interior): 15 in
  • Model: SHW3263-489
  • Number of Shelves: 3
  • Item Width: 15 in
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Material: Wood, Metal, Swarovski Crystals
  • Item Length: 15 in
  • Color: Mahogany
  • Type: Curio Cabinet
  • MPN: SHW3263-489
  • Brand: Jay Strongwater
  • Handle Material: pewter

    Description

    JAY STRONGWATER
    FLORAL VINE CURIO CABINET.
    Handmade with Mahogany good and Waterford Crystal shelves and Swarovski crystals Bouquet details. This Jay Strongwater piece is titled "Cordelia". This piece has handpainted enamel over metal with hand-set multicolored swarovski crystals.
    The Cabinet  consists of three shelves and the
    dimensions
    are 24" Height by 15" Squared . This cabinet was bought and purchased Sak's fifth Ave and is 100% authentic.
    This Jay Strongwater piece is heavy and will require professional shipping and shipping price will reflect this.
    Jay Feinberg founded Jay Feinberg Fashion Jewelry, under his own name in 1982 in New York. He had started making jewelry while a sophomore at Rhode Island School of Design when he began designing a necklace for his mother Penny that led to raves from locals of Montvale, NJ and an order from a hometown boutique. By calling on department stores, he suddenly had orders for his jewelry from Saks, Henri Bendel and Bergdorf Goodman and found that his jewelry was displayed and draped on mannequins wearing Oscar de la Renta dresses with buyers soon calling him requesting his next jewelry collection. This was the beginning of the Jay Feinberg Fashion Jewelry establishment in 1982.
    The 1980s were good years for jewelry and Feinberg’s jewelry often was seen on the New York runways and the pages of Vogue magazines. In 1988, a partnership developed with an investor to help the business grow, but it fell apart and in 1989, the business closed and the investor retained the rights to use the name of Jay Feinberg. In 1990 Jay Feinberg reopened his business changed the name to Jay Strongwater Fashion Jewelry after his mother’s maiden name.
    Strongwater designed jewelry and accessory lines for
    Oscar de la Renta
    to highlight his clothing lines. Strongwater’s jewelry is instantly recognized by the swirled and layered enamel, the hand-placed clear and color
    Swarovski
    crystals and a lighthearted use of motifs. His work is said to be iconic. His jewelry of necklaces, bracelets, brooches, earrings and rings is hand-painted over metal (filigreed, pewter, antique brass, and silver plate, hand-enameled, hand-set in the U.S.A. with
    Swarovski
    crystals using old-world hand crafted techniques with the use of gemstones to include lapis lazuli and tiger eye. Outstanding jewelry designs taken from nature like leaves and flowers and/or animals to include butterflies, frogs, salamanders, and dragonflies embedded in metal of gold and silver. Mark: JAY FEINBERG” (1982 - 1988), “JAY STRONGWATER” (beginning in 1990 on tags and stickers), “JAY” (on earrings).
    Today Jay Strongwater’s jewelry and accessory lines are sold at
    Sak’s Fifth Ave.
    ,
    Henri Bendel
    ,
    Nieman Marcus
    and
    Bergdorf Goodman
    department stores. His high quality work considered as new age Faberge. Additional items now produced by the Strongwater Fashion Jewelry company include picture frames, decorative boxes, compacts, home accents, lipstick cases, vanity trays, bookmarks, figurines, key rings, mini frames, napkin rings, perfume bottles, pins, purse sprays, tabletops items, vanity jars/mirrors, vases, wine stoppers and candlesticks. His jewelry and accessories are of the highest quality in designs and workmanship and, therefore, sell for high end prices.
    Jay Strongwater thinks like a jeweler whether he’s working on a candlestick, a wine stopper or a clock. He knows how to set a stone so it has the right sparkle—some of his pieces glitter with two thousand Swarovski crystals—and he’s always looking for ways to enrich the patterns of his enameling.