Adin Academy lecture: jewellery through time

Jewellery Through the Ages: A Journey in Style

The Language of Style

Jewellery has always reflected the spirit of its time. Each piece carries within it the breath of its century, revealing how people once saw beauty, balance and desire. From the composed elegance of Georgian jewels to the flowing grace of Art Nouveau and the bold rhythm of Art Deco, every style tells us something about the world that shaped it. At Adin, we study these changing forms not merely as historians, but as storytellers who find in every jewel a voice from the past.

Learning to See

To recognise a style is to enter into conversation with history. Each form and colour speaks a dialect of its own, revealing the ideals and emotions of the age that inspired it. By learning to see these visual clues, we understand not only when a jewel was created, but also why it was imagined that way.

Our Approach

The overview that follows is the result of years of study and comparison. These divisions are not our invention, but the outcome of bringing together knowledge from many trusted sources: museum archives, academic research and the long tradition of the trade itself. Through this synthesis, Adin’s classification offers clarity where history overlaps, allowing each period to be viewed in its rightful light.

Authenticity and Style

It is important to remember that a jewel made in the style of a certain period is not necessarily from that period. Throughout history, craftsmen have often revived earlier fashions, sometimes because those designs continued to sell, sometimes because a style had returned to favour and for a public less concerned with authenticity. On occasion, imitation was even used to pass a jewel off as older than it truly was. Recognising the difference between genuine creation and later revival lies at the heart of our expertise, and defines the boundary between what is authentic and what merely pretends to be.

Discover the stories below, told in gold and stone.

art movement France England Germany USA
till
1620
Gothic 1300-1500
Renaissance till 1610
Louis XIII 1610-1643
Mazarin 1643-1715
Louis XIV 1661-1715
Tudor
Elizabeth I 1558-1603
Jacobean
James I 1603-1625
Renaissance
till 1650
Pre-Colonial
till 1625
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1620-1700
Baroque  Régence 1715-1723
Louis XV 1723-1774

Carolean
Charles I
(1625-1649)

Cromwell
Commonwealth 1649-1660
Restauration
Charles II 1660-1685
James II
1685-1688
William and
Mary
1688-1694
Renaissance 
Baroque 1650-1700
Early Colonial
1625-1700
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1695-1760
Rococo  Louis XVI 1774-1793
William III 1694-1702
Queen Anne
1702-1714
Early-Georgian
George I 1714-1727
Mid-Georgian
George II 1727-1760
Baroque 1600-1730
Rococo 1730-1760
William and Mary
1700-1720
Queen Anne 1720-1755
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1755-1805
Neo-Classicism   Directoire 
Late Georgian
George III 1760-1811
Neo-Classicism   Chippendale 1755-1790
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1799-1815
Empire  Napoleon
Empire1799-1815
Romanticism 1795-1880 Empire1800-1815
Early Federal  
Romanticism 1795-1880
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1812-1830
Regency  Restauration
Louis XVIII 1815-1824
Charles X 1824-1830

Romanticism 1795-1880
Regency
Prince Regent 1811-1820
George IV 1820-1830
Biedermeier 1815-1848 Romanticism 1795-1880
American Empire 1810-1820
Late Federal 1820-1830
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1830-1880
Historicism

Eclecticism
Louis-Philippe1830-1848
Seconde Empire 1848-1870

Romanticism 1795-1880
William IV 1830-1837
Victorian
Victoria 1837-1901
Revival 1830-1880 Romanticism 1795-1880
Victorian 1837-1901
art movement France England Germany USA
1880-1900
Arts and Crafts 

3th Republic  
   
Jugendstil 1880-1920
   
art movement France England Germany USA
ca
1880-1914
Art Nouveau    
Edwardian
Edward VII 1901-1910
George V 1910-1936
  Art Nouveau 1890-1914
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1910-1920

Art Deco


Art Deco


Art Deco


Art Deco


Art Deco

art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1920-1940
Interbellum Interbellum
Edward VIII 1936
Interbellum


Interbellum

Bauhaus
1920-1933
Interbellum
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1940-1950
Retro Retro
George VI 1936-1952
Retro

Retro Retro
art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1950-1960

Fifties


Fifties


Fifties


Fifties


Fifties

art movement France England Germany USA
ca.
1960-1970

Sixties


Sixties


Sixties


Sixties


Sixties

art movement France England Germany USA