Art Deco Convertible Sautoir with Aquamarine Briolette
A 1920s-style long jewel with a dramatic briolette drop and convertible period glamour.
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Story & heritage
Fred Leighton’s Art Deco page describes the Jazz Age period as flamboyant, playful and enduring, with Egyptian and Cubist influence after the 1922 discovery of King Tut’s tomb. The sautoir belongs to that long-line, dress-moving world of jewelry.
The official product page describes an Art Deco sautoir suspending an aquamarine briolette of approximately 105 carats, making the drop itself the architectural focus of the piece.
Materials & craft
The listing identifies the jewel as an Art Deco convertible sautoir with an approximately 105 carat aquamarine briolette. Its appeal is scale plus convertibility: a long necklace format that can move between period drama and modern evening restraint.
How to choose & style
Best worn over a plain column dress, tuxedo jacket or fine knit, where the drop can fall cleanly. Avoid competing necklaces; add only small earrings or a bare wrist so the briolette remains the focal point.