A Platinum Jubilee Pin is ready for display at the Goldsmiths’ Fair in London, which opens to the public Tuesday for a fourteen day show.
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The diamond-encrusted pin is a delicate duplicate of the one the Sovereign wore to light the Principal Platinum Jubilee Beacon at Windsor Castle in June, igniting the main evening of the Platinum Jubilee to celebrate her 70-year rule.
According to a statement from Goldsmiths, the platinum pin was personally picked by the Sovereign as a gift from The Goldsmiths’ Company for her Jubilee celebrations.
Goldsmiths is a medieval uniform company (or society) that accepted its royal charter in 1327, specializing in gems and supporting the craftspeople behind it.
Planned by British fine diamond setter David Marshall and his team, the Platinum Jubilee Ornament “addresses the four nations and includes lily of the valley, which featured in The Sovereign’s Coronation bouquet,” the statement said.
The circular clasp was “handpicked by The Sovereign from a shortlist invited from exceptionally acclaimed U.K. adornments makers,” and commissioned into production thereafter.
The glittering pin is stamped with a number on the back to mark it apart from the pin Sovereign Elizabeth wore to light the beacon in June. There, the Sovereign ventured out in the sentimental piece as she symbolically tapped the Commonwealth Globe of Nations, placed on a platform. The ignite set a chain of lights leading to the Principal Beacon outside Buckingham Palace.
The beacon appeared as a model named the “Tree of Trees,” which stood 70 ft. tall in honor of the Sovereign and her astonishing 70 years on the throne. Around 3,000 beacons, including fires and gaslit lights, were lit around the U.K. at the same time.
“She’s our country, our nation, and our Commonwealth, and I accept she’s the person that everyone really admires,” beacon pageant master Bruno Look told Individuals at the hour of what the motion meant. “She has such continuity.”
Goldsmiths heralds the Platinum Jubilee Ornament as the “feature” of its larger Platinum Exhibition. Its annual fair closures October 9.
— Gert’s Royals (@Gertsroyals) June 2, 2022