Here are the two 1916 Easter eggs via Pearly's Qunol:
1916 - Steel Military
Egg
The exterior of
this egg is made from steel, coated in translucent enamel, surmounted by a gold
crown. It is divided into three sections by two smooth horizontal lines. In the
middle section, in inlaid gold, is an image of George the Conqueror in a diamond-shaped
fram e outlined in laurel leaves. This is topped by the Russian emblem, a double-headed
eagle beneath three crowns. Resting on the points of four miniature artillery shells,
this egg makes up in sober significance what it lacks in ornamentation.
The surprise is a miniature painting by Vassily Zuiev on an easel made of gold and steel. The easel is coated in translucent enamel. The frame of the painting is lined with diamonds.
Czar Nicolai presented the egg as an Easter gift to his wife, the Czarina Aleksandra Fyodorovna probably on April 23, 1916.
The egg is one of the ten Imperial eggs that were never sold, and is now housed in the Kremlin Armory.
The surprise is a miniature painting by Vassily Zuiev on an easel made of gold and steel. The easel is coated in translucent enamel. The frame of the painting is lined with diamonds.
Czar Nicolai presented the egg as an Easter gift to his wife, the Czarina Aleksandra Fyodorovna probably
The egg is one of the ten Imperial eggs that were never sold, and is now housed in the Kremlin Armory.
1916 - Order of
St. George Egg
...MUCH MORE
These are the last Imperial Easter eggs that were actually presented to Nicholas II.
The 1917 eggs were invoiced to "Mr. Romanov, Nikolai Aleksandrovich", his abdication having been pretty much forced on March 15 of that year.
Here's the front page of Pearly's Qunol. From there you can scroll through the whole series, if interested.