Imperial Champagne
![]() 062 CT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE HEART NATURAL DIAMOND US $665.00
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![]() 129 CTS IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE PEAR NATURAL DIAMOND US $695.00
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![]() 081 FANCY IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE CUSHION NATURAL DIAMOND US $499.00
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![]() 041 CT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE RADIANT NATURAL DIAMOND US $350.00
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![]() 1708CtRare ColorGood Clarity Imperial Champagne HUGE Tourmaline Full Spark US $1,195.60
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![]() 1449CtRare ColorGood Clarity Imperial Champagne BIG Tourmaline Nice Shape US $1,014.30
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![]() 995CtRare ColorGood Clarity Imperial Champagne BIG Tourmaline Full Fire US $995.00
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![]() 10ct DISTINCTIVE OVAL IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $111.20
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![]() 990ct LUSTROUS OCTAGON CUT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $199.00
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![]() 1630ct BRILLIANT OVAL IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $127.20
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![]() 1245ct OVAL CHECKER CUT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $119.20
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![]() 736CT RAVISHING CUT STONE NATURAL TOPAZ IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE COLOR GEMSTONE US $293.00
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![]() 110CTS SPARKLING 6MM ROUND CUT UNHEATED CEYLON IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE SAPPHIRE US $69.00
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![]() 1660ct UNHEATED GENUINE IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $179.99
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![]() 745ct ULTRA RARE OCTAGON IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $169.00
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![]() 5028 Cts ATTRACTIVE NATURAL IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ US $232.00
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![]() 03 CT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE DIAMOND AAA LUSTER OVAL CUT US $299.00
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![]() 20X9 Imperial Champagne Topaz Gemstones Rough specimen US $19.99
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![]() 060 CT IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE RADIANT NATURAL DIAMOND US $430.00
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![]() PERFECT 3608ctPeach Imperial Champagne Topaz WOW US $79.99
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![]() 1246 Cts BEAUTIFUL RAREST UNIQUE NATURAL IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ FANCY BRAZIL US $59.00
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![]() 103 Ct Fiery Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $1,499.00
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![]() 061Ct Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $850.00
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![]() 052cts PRINCESS IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE NATURAL DIAMOND US $699.99
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![]() 045cts PRINCESS IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE NATURAL DIAMOND US $499.99
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![]() 067 Ct Fervid Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $499.00
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![]() 067Ct Blazing Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $599.00
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![]() 1328 CT GORGEOUS OVAL CHAMPAGNE PEACH NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ US $25.13
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![]() 414 CT RAVISHING ROUND CHAMPAGNE PEACH NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ US $7.83
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![]() CERTIFIED RARE IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE ENSTATITE 214CT US $84.99
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![]() 044cts MARQUISE IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE NATURAL DIAMOND US $77.99
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![]() 325 CT FABULOUS OVAL CHAMPAGNE PEACH NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ US $4.71
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![]() 203 CT ALLURING OVAL CHAMPAGNE PEACH NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ US $4.19
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![]() 863 CT UNHEATED LIGHT CHAMPAGNE NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ BRAZIL US $18.51
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![]() 849 CT SPARKLING PEAR CHAMPAGNE NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ UNHEATED US $18.32
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![]() VVS 336 CT SUPERB OVAL CHAMPAGNE PEACH NATURAL IMPERIAL TOPAZ US $4.80
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![]() 023 Ct Fiery Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $125.00
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![]() 3864ct Fine Oval Cut Imperial Champagne Topaz VS US $169.99
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![]() 3370Ct Natural Oval Orange Imperial Champagne Topaz US $337.00
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![]() 3150ct AAA Huge Oval Cut Imperial Champagne Topaz VVS US $145.00
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![]() 1470Ct Natural Untreated Gem Pair Oval 10x14mm Bright Champagne Imperial Topaz US $88.20
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![]() 027 Ct Fulgid Fancy Imperial Champagne Natural Diamond US $150.00
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![]() DELUXE LIGHT PEACH CHAMPAGNE IMPERIAL TOPAZ 3141 CTS US $195.00
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![]() 2231ct DAZZLING EARTH MAINED TOP NATURAL IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE TOPAZ GEMSTOMES US $75.00
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1920s Berlin sparkles to life courtesy of Max Raabe and his orchestra
The dapper Max Raabe and his Palast Orchester visit Seattle Feb. 23, bringing a taste of Weimar-era songs and glamour with them.
World Most Expensive Wines
1787 Chateau Lafite | article provided by http://www.cocktailsandwines.com
When an enterprising young man named James Christie opened his sales rooms in London in December 1766, his first auction consisted of the estate of a "deceased nobleman" containing "a large Quantity of Madeira and high Flavour'd Claret." The records don't relate how much these delightfully described "high Flavour'd clarets" fetched but as the whole sale realized a grand total £175, it is a sure bet that if Christie had known that two hundred years later, in 1985, his now famous auction house would sell one bottle of wine for £105,000, or $160,000, he might have held back a bottle or two to enrich his future heirs.
This bottle was a Bordeaux, a 1787 Chateau Lafite, and, according to The Guinness Book of World Records, 18 years later it still is the world's most expensive bottle of wine. Its great age alone would have ensured a good price but what gave it its special cachet, especially to American collectors, and ensured the record price tag were the initials Th.J. etched in the glass.
The bottle had belonged to Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States and one of the most revered of its founding fathers. A philosopher, scientist and statesmen, the aristocratic Jefferson was also an avid oenophile. When he was ambassador to France he spent much of his time visiting the vineyards of Bordeaux and Burgundy, buying wine for his own collection and on behalf of his friends back home. He is also associated with two other bottles of very pricy wine, a 1775 Sherry ($43,500) and the most expensive white wine ever sold, a 1787 Chateau d'Yquem ($56,588).
Of course none of these wines are actually drinkable now; it is unusual for even the best Bordeaux to last more than 50 years, and 200 years is beyond any wine's limit. The allure of these high-priced bottles of vinegar, and other wines of its ilk, is purely in the joy of collecting, not consuming. The 1787 Lafite was explicitly bought as a piece of Jefferson memorabilia, not as a bottle of wine, and it now resides in the Forbes Collection in New York. These wines are rather like old stamps, something to be collected, horded but never used, and they command such high prices not because of their utility but because of their scarcity and consequent appeal to collectors.
Compiling a list of the World's Most Expensive Bottles of Wine is not as simple as it might first appear. How do you compare the price paid for a double magnum--that's four bottles--to a single bottle? Do you rate them on the same scale or do you divide the price of the big bottle by four in order to determine its per-single bottle price?
So, rather than compiling a league table we determined 11 separate categories, then sought out the most expensive bottle in each category, and a pretty interesting search it turned out to be. One of the first things you'll notice is that all the wines on the list were sold at auction, because, except in rare occasions, the seller knows that the publicity surrounding a special bottle, and the heated atmosphere of competitive bidding, often results in even higher prices.
The world's most expensive bottle of wine that could actually be drunk today is also the most expensive wine ever sold in America, a Montrachet 1978 from Domaine de la Romanée-Conti that was hammered down at Sotheby's in New York in 2001. The lot of seven bottles fetched $167,500, or $23,929 per bottle. This is an extraordinary price for a white wine, even in the rarified world of wine collecting. What happened was that two avid collectors were bidding against each other and got carried away, each refusing to yield as the price rose through the stratosphere.
Michael Broadbent, the former head of Christie's wine department, relates a similar story concerning the sale of the Jefferson Lafite. As the bidding approached £100,000 for this unique bottle, he changed bid steps, that is the amount the bids increased by. One of the two remaining bidders was Marvin Shanken, publisher of the Wine Spectator, and according to Broadbent, he didn't notice the change until, to his very obvious horror, he realized that he had just offered to pay £100,000 for one bottle of wine. As he sat there ashen faced a great hush fell over the packed auction room as everyone waited to see if the other bidder, Christopher Forbes, would come back in. He eventually did, at £105,000, much to Shanken's very palpable relief.
Then there is the strange case of the most expensive bottle of wine never sold. In 1989 William Sokolin, a New York wine merchant, had a bottle of Chateau Margaux 1787, also with Jefferson's initials, on consignment from its English owner. He was asking $500,000 for it but had had no cash offers when he took it along to a Chateau Margaux dinner at the Four Seasons restaurant. (Why would it cost so much more than the 1787 Lafite? It didn't cost more than the Lafite, just that Sokolin was asking $500,000. I don't think he expected to get this much and had had no offers by the time of the accident. However, just by asking such a huge sum he generated a lot of publicity, which some people speculate was the whole point of the exercise. He did however get $225,000 from the insurance company which he claims, with some justification, makes it the world's most expensive bottle, even if it was never sold. Besides everything else it's a fun story about a very expensive bottle however you rate it.)
At the end of the evening he was getting ready to leave when a waiter carrying a coffee tray bumped the bottle, breaking it. Luckily, Sokolin had the foresight to insure his valuable vin, and shared the $225,000 payout with the owner, which makes this the world's most expensive broken bottle of wine. History does not tell us what happened to the unfortunate waiter.
What all these wines have in common, whether it's the undrinkable 1787 Lafite or the eminently drinkable 1945 Mouton, and what makes them command such astronomic prices, is their scarcity value.
The world seems to have an ever-increasing appetite for collecting unusual old things, be they baseball cards, 1950s Formica furniture or steam train memorabilia, and it's only natural that rare wines are subject to this same collecting mania.
Now, with more and more people discovering the pleasures of drinking wine, especially the newly rich of China and East Asia, the prices of all fine wines will continue to rise and it will only be a matter of time before Mr. Jefferson's bottle, and several others on our list, see their formally eye-popping prices surpassed as ever richer and ever more determined collectors compete for that one, must-have bottle of wine.
Some more impressive & expensive wines in the world.
1992 Screaming Eagle
around $80,000
At Auction Napa Valley 2008, a charity event, a lot of six magnums of Screaming Eagle were sold for $500,000. In addition to the wine, the lot included a dinner at the winery. The lucky purchaser was Chase Bailey, an executive at Cisco Systems.
1945 Chateau Mouton-Rothschild Jeroboam
$114,614
Sold to an anonymous buyer at a Christie’s auction in 1997, this bottle comes from what is considered by wine enthusiasts to be one of the finest vintages of the 20th century.
“Th.J” 1787 Chateau Lafitte
$160,000
A bottle of 1787 Chateau Lafitte which sold at Christie’s London in December of 1985, this wine was originally reported to be from the cellar of Thomas Jefferson, the former US President, and this most expensive bottle of wine had the initials Th.J etched into the glass bottle. It made its way into the hands of American tycoon Bill Koch, who became suspicious of the origins of the four bottles he had purchased. Eventually, he instigated the investigation that debunked the supposed origin of what was, at the time of purchase, the most expensive wine in the world.
Shipwrecked 1907 Heidsieck
$275,000
These hundred year old bottles of Champagne from the Heidsieck vineyard in Champagne took over eighty years to reach their destination. Shipped to the Russian Imperial family in 1916, a shipwreck off the coast of Finland caused this champagne to be lost at sea until divers discovered over 200 bottles in 1997. Now they’re finally being sold—to wealthy guests at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Moscow, at least. Of course, the wine’s extraordinary tale and incredible age are what makes it the world’s most expensive wine.
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