Sathya Saran meets Mme Brigette
Chabbert, the woman who dreams up great designs for Cartier.
Madame Brigette Chabbert has a
dream. It involves two diamonds. Of fifty carats each. Almost perfectly
matched.
It is rare to find such clear, large diamonds that
nudge at perfection. And now that she has chanced upon them, and has them in her
care, Madame Brigette Chabbert feels destiny is trying to tell her something.
Perhaps that she will be able to make history with the help of these stones. Set
them in such a way that they become conversation pieces across the globe.
“They are Golconda diamonds but not famous” she muses, “We
will have to do something to make them famous.”
But to make
the magic happen, the stones have to reveal their mystery. Stones, however big
or small, have a way of talking to Chabbert. And, she is waiting for her
precious charges to speak. She is tuned in.
STONED ON THE BEAUTY
Ever
since she left school at 17 — “I told my mom ‘I don’t
like school. Could I do something else?‘ ” — Chabbert has been
involved in romancing the stone. A stint at jewellery designing did not work and
she moved, “with a little luck” to fill a vacancy at Cartier, where
she was taught to work with stones. The romance of a lifetime began then, and
today, Chabbert, as director of

precious stones purchasing, Cartier Joaillerie International,
finds the love affair is more magnetic than ever.
Travelling the
world is part of the affair. Her search for stones that will convert to
jewellery with the Cartier stamp has taken her many times round the
globe.
“In the beginning, I worked with small stones,
especially diamonds,” she explains. Her search for stones that Cartier
could then set into jewellery took her predominantly to the countries rich in
mines — Sri Lanka, Burma, India.
Passion makes us do strange
things. And her passion for stones soon had the delicately-built Chabbert
exchanging her chic clothes for rougher wear that included hard hats and eye
protectors. And had her walking through the mines to understand the real nature
of Earth’s mysterious ways of creating precious stones.
“I have also watched and learnt the art of cutting
stones,” she reveals, “and now know that there is so much history
to each stone.” It is knowledge that comes with its own responsibilities:
“Now, when I see a stone and say ‘No, I don’t like it’,
it hurts me to say it, because each stone has had so much of life before it
reaches the shop where I am seeing it. It is like rejecting the labour of so
many people who have worked on getting that stone to that state.”

It’s a feeling that has taught her to respect all stones,
“even those that are not of our quality.” And to heighten the
enjoyment in doing “the most beautiful job in the
world.”
Part of her enchantment with her job comes from the
fact that “every day, I learn something new, something different.”
Like the time she was in Madagascar and found sapphires of very unusual colours.
“The working conditions there are awful for the miners,” she says.
“There is no organisation, not even safe water. And I think Cartier has a
responsibility. It helps improve the conditions in such mines when it buys from
them.”
Chabbert admits to a “natural flair for stones, an
intrinsic understanding of their magic.” It is a quality she has nurtured
and cultivated over the years, since the ‘lucky star’ took her to
Cartier when she was but 24, when she joined them as the only woman in the stone
department.
“You cannot buy a stone without love,” she
says. “When I buy a stone, I love it. I look at it at different times of
the day, at different points... And it talks to me.”
And then she
tells me about the rubies.
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