In the 1880s Carl Fabergé reached the heights of success and at the Pan-Russian Exhibition in Moscow in 1882 he was awarded a gold medal for his jewellery work. In the same year, Carl's younger brother Agaton joined the company and extended the product range to include Easter eggs, small animals, human figures, flowers and plants..
In 1885 the Tsar discovered the high quality of Fabergé's products and on 1 May 1885 he made Fabergé a court supplier and placed the first order for Easter eggs.

In 1890 Fabergé was appointed court appraiser and in 1894 the company received an order from Nicholas II to manufacture a stunning pearl and gold necklace (valued at 166,500,000 roubles or around SEK 47 million) for the then Princess Alice von Hessen-Darmstadt who became Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna.
After this Fabergé was awarded gold medals at all the international exhibitions and fairs where he exhibited.
During the company's history it manufactured over 150,000 items of jewellery and the atelier employed more than 500 master jewellers who were appointed by the master himself.
Carl Fabergé believed that it was important to demonstrate his confidence in the individual master jewellers by allowing them to sign their work. The central principle was simple. Each product had to be manufactured in the same atelier by the same master craftsman, who could make all the decisions about the product from the initial design right through to the finish. This allowed Fabergé to guarantee that each object was a genuine product made by one master jeweller.
The Genuine Story
1842
Carl’s father Gustav Fabergé becomes a master jeweller and starts a jewellery company in St. Petersburg.
1846
Carl Fabergé is born.
1872
Carl Fabergé takes over his father ’s business and transforms it to the largest jewellery company in the Russian Empire.
1885
Carl Fabergé becomes court supplier to the Tsar and the first eastern egg is produced.
1890
Carl Fabergé is appointed court appraiser.
1890
Carl Fabergé becomes Court supplier for the Swedish king and during this period
1897
Carl Faberge is court supplier to most of the Royal courts in all of Europe. 1917
Russian revolution.
1918
The revolution forces Carl Fabergé to close the company.
1920
Carl Fabergé dies in Switzerland.
1991
Soviet Union (USSR) collapses and Russia is reborn.
1992
The Alfa jewellery workshop in St. Petersburg is founded on 16 December 1992 by Nikolai Schajdullin. They start to manufacture the original designs by Carl Fabergé from drawings found in Russian archives.