
The Queen’s Jewellery: BJA dove brooch
The brooch takes the form of a dove. It is a simple diamond frame with platinum and gold shamrocks, thistles, roses and daffodils (the flowers of the UK) and holly
The brooch takes the form of a dove. It is a simple diamond frame with platinum and gold shamrocks, thistles, roses and daffodils (the flowers of the UK) and holly
This brooch is in the form of a spray of wattle, the national flower of Australia, and tea-tree blossom. It was presented to The Queen in 1954 as she toured
This flower brooch is in the form of a spray of millet (sometimes called sorghum), a crop that is abundant in Botswana. It features 11 pear shaped diamonds to create
Continuing our look at The Queen’s brooches, this is a small brooch featuring a pink stone with a diamond setting, surrounded by large diamonds, and smaller ones between on the
This brooch features a shell made from solid rows of diamonds, which radiate from a single large pearl nestled at the base of it. Either side, the shell curls inwards,
An unusual piece of Her Majesty’s in the fact that it isn’t of a standard form, but mimicking a cameo. The brooch features a pink Queen Elizabeth rose, hand-painted and
This show-stopping brooch of The Queen’s once belonged to her great-grandmother, Queen Victoria. It features a large emerald-cut diamond encircled by brilliant cut diamonds, with an outer row of 12