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The pairing of red and black is interpreted in a wide range of shades: sunny hues of coral, luminous hues of rubellite or intense hues of ruby. The black of onyx or lacquer highlights its contours and volumes, and draws shadow-like effects while inducing a rhythm.
Since it first appeared in the 1910s, the combination of green and black became more popular as the Maison began to research the purity of forms and the simplicity of design. Onyx pushes boundaries, emphasises, gives relief, and showcases its depth to the point of becoming a recurrent element of the Art Deco era.
Carrying the pioneering spirit of the Maison even further, Louis Cartier introduced the combination of blue and green, colours that had always been deemed incompatible. What he called his “peacock motif” is now a signature colour of the Maison.
Cartier has added many other, often unprecedented, colour combinations to the most emblematic ones. In the 1930s under the impetus of Jeanne Toussaint, the Creative Director at the time, jewellery pieces mixed fine precious stones together without any distinction. Amethyst, aquamarine, citrine, and peridot took their place beside diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and emeralds. This taste for confrontation in terms of materials stands as one of the Maison’s stylistic signatures.