Helen Ver Standig
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Wellington Jewels was a Washington, D.C. based jewelry store and direct mail chain, operating from the 1960s through the 1990s. The jewelry store chain specialized in
artificial diamond Lab-grown diamond (LGD; also called laboratory-grown, laboratory-created, man-made, artisan-created, artificial, synthetic, or cultured diamond) is diamond that is produced in a controlled technological process (in contrast to naturally formed ...
jewelry and sold high-quality gold and platinum settings containing imitation gems, marketed by Mac and Helen Ver Standig's elaborate and highly successful advertising as prominently-labeled "counterfeit diamonds.".


Wellington Jewels

Wellington Jewels was a business venture of marketer, socialite and activist Helen Ver Standig (née Von Stondeg), promoted as "Madame Wellington," and her husband Moishe Belmont "Mac" Ver Standig. While on vacation in Switzerland in 1961, Helen met a man who was developing jewelry based on
strontium titanate Strontium titanate is an oxide of strontium and titanium with the chemical formula Sr Ti O3. At room temperature, it is a centrosymmetric paraelectric material with a perovskite structure. At low temperatures it approaches a ferroelectric phase ...
. She invested $10,000 in his work, and the Ver Standigs launched their jewelry business in 1964. Helen Ver Standig was the subject of a caricature that the New York ''Times'' cartoonist
Al Hirschfeld Albert Hirschfeld (June 21, 1903 – January 20, 2003) was an American caricaturist best known for his black and white portraits of celebrities and Broadway stars. Personal life Al Hirschfeld was born in 1903 in a two-story duplex at 1313 Carr ...
drew at her husband's request, which was extensively used in the chain's advertising as "Madame Wellington." The Ver Standigs, who were experienced advertising agents and marketers, mounted extensive campaigns using the Hirschfeld caricature and Helen's "Madame Wellington" persona to market the brand, prominently advertising the fake diamonds in straightforward terms. Madame Wellington jewelry was purchased by politicians, a
First Lady First lady is an unofficial title usually used for the wife, and occasionally used for the daughter or other female relative, of a non-monarchical A monarchy is a form of government in which a person, the monarch, is head of state fo ...
, and a Supreme Court justice. The Ver Standigs made a point of publicizing when their store was periodically burglarized, with advertisements prominently warning "BEWARE OF DIAMOND SWINDLERS." According to Helen Ver Standig, a European noble family bought a $25,000 fake tiara. Wellington Jewels had a total of 42 stores either owned by the Ver Standigs or licensed in the United States, Canada and Europe. Wellington jewels were frequently purchased by owners of large genuine diamonds, who preferred to keep the real items in a vault, but wanted to still appear to be wearing them. The average stone sold by the Palm Beach Wellington store was 15 carats, at a 1971 price of $40 per carat, versus a diamond at $800 to $1600 per carat. A shipment of fake Wellington diamonds that was stolen at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York was sold as real for $700 per carat. Since strontium titanate has almost the same refractive index as diamond, an appraisal based solely on refractive index will not reveal the fake's true nature. The largest Wellington stones were 60 carats. Wellington's settings were of high quality, using 14 or 18 karat gold, and the stones were cut in Germany, Switzerland, France or Israel by professional diamond cutters. The stones were sold in plain black boxes that indicated neither genuineness nor imitation. In 1992, the M. Belmont Ver Standig group sold Wellington Jewels to the
QVC QVC (short for "Quality Value Convenience") is an American free-to-air television network, and flagship shopping channel specializing in televised home shopping, owned by Qurate Retail Group. Founded in 1986 by Joseph Segel in West Chester, Penn ...
network.


Helen Ver Standig

Helen Van Stondeg was born in Washington, D.C. on July 11, 1920, the granddaughter of Jewish immigrants from Poland. After graduation from Woodrow Wilson High School (now
Jackson-Reed High School , motto_translation = In days to come, it will please us to remember this , address = 3950 Chesapeake Street Northwest , region = Ward 3 , city = Washington, D.C. , zipcode ...
) in 1936, she worked in her father's tailor shop. In 1938 Mac Ver Standig, a newspaper manager from Boston, visited the shop to discuss the similar family names and possible common ancestry. Mac and Helen eloped two days later and married in Elkton, Maryland, with a $15 diamond ring bought in a pawn shop. The Ver Standigs sold newspaper advertising in Massachusetts and bought weekly newspapers in Cranston, Rhode Island and Greer, South Carolina, then moved to Washington and sold advertising for WWDC radio, and then opened their own advertising agency. The agency was for a time the largest south of New York. Clients included
Geico The Government Employees Insurance Company (GEICO ) is a private American auto insurance company with headquarters in Chevy Chase, Maryland. It is the second largest auto insurer in the United States, after State Farm. GEICO is a wholly owne ...
,
Dart Drug Dart Drug is a now-defunct chain of discount drug stores in the metropolitan Washington, DC region. It was founded in 1955, by Herbert Haft and his wife Gloria in Adams Morgan. The chain expanded to over 100 stores, and became a vehicle (as Dart ...
, and
Hot Shoppes Marriott Corporation was a hospitality company that operated from 1927 until 1993, founded by J. Willard Marriott and Frank J. Kimball as Hot Shoppes, Inc. In 1957, Marriott Corporation opened its first hotel in Arlington County, Virginia, U ...
. A 1957 campaign for Wilkins Coffee employed two puppets created by University of Maryland student Jim Henson in a series of consistently violent eight-second ads. The puppets, named Wilkins and Wontkins and voiced by Henson, became a basis for the Muppets. After selling the advertising business, Mac and Helen concentrated on their simulated diamond business and management of their resort hotel on Cape Cod. Mac died in 1972. Helen invested in radio stations and started a real estate management company. Helen Ver Standig died on September 9, 2006 of respiratory failure at
Sibley Memorial Hospital Sibley Memorial Hospital is a non-profit hospital located in The Palisades neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It is fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, and is licensed by the District of Columbia De ...
in Washington.


References

{{Reflist American jewellers Diamond simulants