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Viva Elsa!- The iconic sculptural work of the famed Tiffany designer Elsa Peretti is coming home

Vogue US

|

August 2024

In 1972, the designer Elsa Peretti bought a modest cottage she had seen in Spain for a few thousand dollars –all she could afford at the time. Since then, her fortunes grew and grew, and now to celebrate her legacy with Tiffany & Co.– a match made 50 years ago the iconic jewelry and design house has launched three new pieces in her memory: A bone ring, a split cuff ring, and a bone cuff in 18-karat gold set with a teardrop of pavé diamonds.

- By Hamish Bowles- Photos by Adrianna Glaviano

Viva Elsa!- The iconic sculptural work of the famed Tiffany designer Elsa Peretti is coming home

In 1972, the designer Elsa Peretti bought a modest cottage she had seen in Spain for a few thousand dollars –all she could afford at the time. Since then, her fortunes grew and grew, and now to celebrate her legacy with Tiffany & Co.– a match made 50 years ago the iconic jewelry and design house has launched three new pieces in her memory: A bone ring, a split cuff ring, and a bone cuff in 18-karat gold set with a teardrop of pavé diamonds. Organic and sensual, they are as relevant now as they were a half century ago, and they transport us to the village of Sant Martí Vell, in Spain's Catalonia region, where Elsa discovered that house. It was passionate adoration from the moment she first saw the Casa Pequeña, cradled by roses and wisteria, on a starry night. The cottage, part of a ruinous village halfway up a hill, would become both a sanctuary and a place of inspiration.

Elsa's father, Ferdinando, was as rich as Croesus but, scandalized by his daughter turning her back on the family's prim, conservative ways, left her to make a living for herself. Elsa taught French and worked as a ski instructor in Gstaad before she took a degree in interior design and worked in Milan for the architect Dado Torrigiani. In 1964, she became a fashion model, working in Barcelona and hanging out with a group of Catalan creatives –the architect Ricardo Bofill and the sculptor Xavier Corberó among them– who were against Franco and his fascist regime and known as la gauche divine (the divine left).

image

Golds Standars. An archival Peretti Cuff.

In 1968, Elsa moved to New York, and her career soared.

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