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Appreciation of tsar's egg cultural relics
On Easter morning, Faberge presented an Easter egg to Alexander III, which looked very simple. But to everyone's surprise, there is an egg made of gold in the eggshell, and the outer layer is white enamel. There is a little golden hen in the egg, and there is a mini queen's crown inlaid with diamonds and a miniature egg made of ruby in the belly of the golden hen.

Sadly, this egg with precious historical and artistic value has now become a "peeled banana", leaving only a white glazed eggshell and a golden hen on the first floor. In the end, the double surprise, the ruby queen's crown and small eggs hidden in the hen's stomach, were lost because they were resold in the revolutionary turmoil of the 1920s.

Eggs are loved and worshipped by many nationalities all over the world, but drawing eggs is a unique traditional custom of Slavs, and Russians are the people who have preserved this artistic custom to this day. Russians paint their love, dreams and longings on eggs, which is the condensation of Russian soul and art.

Faberge spent nearly a year designing every egg. He hid in the studio specially set up by the imperial court, designed the shape and theme of the eggs, and then carefully turned the ideas into tributes with a carving knife. These beautifully conceived and beautifully made Faberge eggs have raised jewelry art to the highest level of decorative art since the Renaissance. Faberge, a talented Russian goldsmith, created dazzling czar eggs. He used his intelligence to turn an ordinary egg into a gorgeous legend. At the 1900 Paris World Expo, the czar's eggs were first publicly displayed, and Faberge's reputation spread all over Europe.