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Presented by logo Homo Faber by Michelangelo Foundation
© Piaget
Tracing Venice

Piaget

Gold crafting

The Piaget story starts in La Côte-aux-Fées, where Georges-Edouard Piaget set up his first workshop in 1874 in the family farmhouse. It was here that he started to devote himself to producing high-precision movements. Faithful to its pioneering spirit, in the late 1950s, Piaget set about designing ultra-thin movements and launched ultra-thin watches for men and women, defining the codes of a new elegance that would become the Maison’s trademark. This ultra-thin mastery opened up completely new creative possibilities for the cases and dials and led to the reinvention of the precious jewellery watch. Piaget has always been dedicated to using only the finest materials, such as gold and platinum, and decided to fully integrate watchmaking and jewellery expertise. Cultivating a spirit of luxury while emphasizing its creativity, love for noble materials, and strong craftsmanship, Piaget revealed its own style; mastering the craft of gold, exploring colours, innovating with new shapes, and using precious gems and hard stones dials.

TechniqueStory

Gold engraving
Since 1960 Piaget has developed an exclusive gold-engraving pattern named “Palace decoration”. On a bracelet made out of links that are painstakingly assembled using pins, the Palace decoration is a multiplication of horizontal grooves with different depths and thicknesses, hand-engraved on the structure, giving the bracelet an extremely distinctive look. This exceptional hand-engraving expertise makes each piece of jewellery and each watch unique.

Gold chain making
It takes the meticulous care and expertise of the jewellery chain maker to determine the diameter of the gold wire. Then the craftsman twists the wire, creates links, shapes them, and assembles them on a gold rod. After several repetitions of these precise and masterful gestures, the first links of a bracelet, which resembles gold embroidery, are revealed. Piaget is thereby perpetuating a traditional craft handed down from generation to generation, enabling the realisation of creative and rare pieces.

Objects Details: Genealogies of Ornament Exhibition Contact
+41 22 884 48 44
www.piaget.com

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