The 19 Most Beautiful Fabergé Eggs for a Dream Easter Basket Inline
Photo: William Thomas Cain / Getty Images1/19378367 08: The Apple Blossom Easter Egg, part of the Faberge Collection, on display at the First USA Riverfront Arts Center, September 14, 2000, in Wilmington, DE. The exhibit, which contains the largest collection of the jewelers work ever assembled, is on display until February 18, 2001. (Photo by William Thomas Cain/Newsmakers)
Photo: Laski Diffusion / Getty Images2/19378367 06: The Fifteenth Anniversary Imperial Easter Egg, part of the Faberge Collection, sits on display at the First USA Riverfront Arts Center, September 14, 2000, in Wilmington, DE. The exhibit, which contains the largest collection of the jewelers work ever assembled, is on display until February 18, 2001. (Photo by William Thomas Cain/Newsmakers)
Photo: Laski Diffusion / Getty Images3/19386627 01: A Faberge Egg from the Kremlin Museum collection in Moscow, Russia, March 2001. The eggs were first designed in 1884 by the artist Peter Carl Faberge who gave one to a Russian czar who then gave it to his wife as an Easter gift. The wife loved it so much that she ordered them to be made each year for Easter. Faberge s primary source of inspiration for the designs came from historical artworks from previous centuries. (Photo by Laski Diffusion/East News/Liaison)
Photo: Laski Diffusion / Getty Images4/19386627 06: A Faberge Egg from the Kremlin Museum collection in Moscow, Russia, March 2001. The eggs were first designed in 1884 by the artist Peter Carl Faberge who gave one to a Russian czar who then gave it to his wife as an Easter gift. The wife loved it so much that she ordered them to be made each year for Easter. Faberge s primary source of inspiration for the designs came from historical artworks from previous centuries. (Photo by Laski Diffusion/East News/Liaison)
Photo: Chance Yeh / Getty Images5/19386627 12: A Faberge Egg from the Kremlin Museum collection in Moscow, Russia, March 2001. The eggs were first designed in 1884 by the artist Peter Carl Faberge who gave one to a Russian czar who then gave it to his wife as an Easter gift. The wife loved it so much that she ordered them to be made each year for Easter. Faberge s primary source of inspiration for the designs came from historical artworks from previous centuries. (Photo by Laski Diffusion/East News/Liaison)