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Swarovski crystals and the Czech city of Jablonec

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I might be the only blogger in the southern hemisphere who can pinpoint the Czech city of Jablonec with total accuracy. My Czech parents-in-law were liberated in 1945 and moved to Jablonec to work.

In the 18th century, the first glass jewellery was produced in Jablonec and exported, spreading the town's name throughout Eur­ope. Even before it was given full town status by Emperor Francis Joseph in 1866, Jablonec was permitted to organise two annual fairs and a weekly market. For a small city (only 50,000 people even now), it was boxing above its weight. Naturally the Prussian-Austrian War of 1866 was a disaster for the glass and artificial jewellery business but one good thing happened - Jablonec traders started to turn to foreign markets instead.

In time, new machines in Jablonec could produce a wider variety of glass jewellery, specialising in a process that pressed molten glass into a heated mould – reliable and not outrageously expensive. The moulds were so important that most people believed the Czechs were the masters of pressed glass.

Swarovski crystals
on the back of a wedding dress.

After WW1, Bohemia became part of the new state of Czechoslovakia and within a decade, the Czechs were the largest glass exporters in the world. Even the Depression did not close the factories. But catast­rophe followed. In October 1938, after the Munich Agreement, Jablonec was occupied by the German Reich as a part of Sudetenland.

Today the main building of The Museum of Glass and Jewellery in Jablonec still looks as if it emerged during floral Art Nouveau era, It did, initially as the 1904 home of the Zimmer & Schmidt Company. If visitors wanted to review 100+ years of the city’s glass and metal jewellery and glassware, this is where they would come.

This Northern Bohemian city’s most famous citizen was Daniel Swartz (later Swarovski) (1862–1956). His father had been a glass cutter who owned a small glass factory and there was every expectation that young Daniel would complete his apprenticeship in glass-cutting, eventually taking over daddy’s business.

The first ever International Electric Exhibition was held in the Palais de l'Industrie in Paris’ Champs-Elysees in 1881. I am not sure if young Daniel was there in Paris or perhaps he visited the International Electric Exhibition in Vienna in 1883 instead. In either case he saw machines invented by Edison and other pioneers, and recognised the signific­ance of the new technology for his own career plans. Inspired by the Electric Exhibitions, he passed his father’s expectations; in 1892, Daniel developed and patented an electric cutting machine that cut crystal jewellery stones with great precision. And of course the work was much faster than had formerly been possible by laborious hand work. 

Most sons want to move on. In 1895, Daniel Swartz changed his name to Swarovski and with two financiers, Armand Kosman and Franz Weis, founded the Swarovski Company. They established their crystal-cutting factory in Wattens in the Tyrol part of Austria.

From my perspective it was a shame that he left Czechoslovakia. But it made perfect sense that he should lease an existing factory that had its own small power station. Since the grinding processes that Daniel Swarovski patented were very energy-intensive, he was delighted that the Wattens site could generate hydraulic electricity from the river Inn. So important was the original Wattens site that the company still runs a spectacular crystal-themed museum there, Swarovski Crystal Worlds.

The Museum of Glass and Jewellery in Jablonec

Swarovski never hid the fact that his products were made of crystal glass and were not made from diamonds. But if he made the crystal beautiful enough, women would actively choose his fashion accessories and crystal-based ornaments for their homes. Elegant women in Paris and St Petersburg society clearly loved the flawless brilliance of Swarovski’s products.

After WW1 it is said that the entire fashion world became very interested in Swarovski crystals, once the famous designer Coco Chanel started using them in her finery. Jewellery stones were placed in decorative laces, and applied to garments and accessories.

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Swarovski celebrated its 100th anniversary with a variety of special activities and products in 1995. Vivienne Becker's book called Swarovski: the Fascination of Crystal was published. And the Swarovski Crystal Society organised a trip from Prague to Wattens with 2,000 participants. I wondered why the trip started in Prague and not in Jablonec. Apparently the Swarovski Society wanted to show visitors the amazing Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague, especially the jewellery. 







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