Jeweled Easter egg mostly commissioned by the Czar of Russia
The Imperial Coronation egg, one of the most famous and iconic of all the Fabergé eggs The Moscow Kremlin egg, 1906
A Fabergé egg (Russian: яйцо Фаберже, romanized: yaytso Faberzhe) is a jewelled egg first created by the jewellery firm House of Fabergé, in Saint Petersburg, Russia. As many as 69 eggs were created during the Czarist era, of which 61 are known to have survived. Virtually all of the original first-edition eggs were manufactured under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé, between 1885 and 1917. The most famous of the firm's creations are the 50 delivered Imperial Easter eggs, of which 44 are known to be in complete or partial physical existence, leaving the fate of those remaining unknown. The eggs are very highly sought-after collectors items. For example, the Fabergé Winter Egg was sold for US$30.2 million at auction in 2025.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).