| Oscar Heyman Bros. |
|
(1912 - present) Oscar was hired at Cartier's first New York workshop at 712 Fifth Avenue; he was the first non-French bench jeweler hired. When the whole family moved to New York in 1912, the brothers opened a workshop of their own: Oscar Heyman & Bros. Since then, the firm has been a self-proclaimed jeweler’s jeweler, producing pieces for, among others, Cartier, Van Cleef and Arpels, J.E. Caldwell and Shreve, Crump and Low. It also retails some its own merchandise. The firm's reputation for craftsmanship is unsurpassed. Heyman was reputedly the first American firm to master the invisible setting introduced to the United States by Van Cleef & Arpels in 1936. Known for their floral-motif pieces, the firm won gold medals at New York’s World Fair in 1949 for a collection of orchid, pansy, and gardenia brooches. It also has been entrusted with important commissions. In 1969, Oscar Heyman was asked by Cartier to design and produce a setting for the Taylor-Burton diamond, a task that the firm successfully completed with great fanfare. Today Heyman continues to produce lovely pieces, specializing in platinum jewelry with diamonds, sapphires, emeralds, and rubies. The workshops creates their own tools, and the firm holds various patents for manufacturing techniques. The third generation of Heyman family members now run the business. |
