Arnold Lulls

The Countess of Derby, Elizabeth de Vere received a jewel set with diamonds worth about £230 supplied by Lulls.

Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, gave this jewel depicting Habsburg emblems of a diamond double eagle and golden fleece to her in Madrid in May 1605.

Their son, also Arnold Lulls, died in 1618 and left a legacy of £10 to his "cousin", Jane van Lore, daughter of Peter Vanlore.

[10] His daughter Susan or Susannah Lulls (1597–1654) married John Newdigate, a son of the courtier Anne Fitton, in June 1621.

[15] After the death of John Newdigate, Susannah married Simon Edwards, a London haberdasher and member of the Levant Company, in 1646.

[17] The name "John Blackwell" is inscribed on the flyleaf of the album of drawings made by Arnold Lulls now held by the Victoria and Albert Museum.

[22] A letter sent to Arthur Bodren, a page of Anne of Denmark, describes efforts to find diamonds and rubies in the royal Jewel House of the right size to suit a pattern drawn by a Mr Halle.

[23] John Spilman made record drawings of the cut and settings of eleven diamonds which Anne of Denmark pawned in March 1615.

Designs in the Lulls album for aigrettes or feather jewels have been associated with a portrait by Paul van Somer at the Yale Center for British Art, called Elizabeth Pierrepont, Countess of Kellie.

Portrait by Paul van Somer showing a woman, possibly Elizabeth, Countess of Kellie wearing a feather or aigrette