handmade jewellery by contemporary designers
Showing posts with label Pearls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearls. Show all posts

Monday, 24 September 2012

we are one! happy birthday to us


If you have visited our online shop recently, or been to see us on Facebook then you will already know that we are now a whole ONE YEAR OLD! The time has flown by and we are so pleased with how things have developed and how far they have come. It feels like only yesterday we were rushing around to get things ready for our opening.

The support we have received from friends old and new has been amazing; bloggers, facebookers, tweeters, new businesses and more. We have to express our thanks to the lovely and welcoming people of Stokesley, where our shop is based and people from the wonderful surrounding towns and villages. Not a day passes when we don't meet someone new and interesting. 

Our first year has been a dream, full of hard work and stressful at times but we can only hope the next year is as fun, challenging and as inspirational.

We embark on the next year with a makeover on the outside of the shop, more designers available in store than when we first started, exciting plans for exhibitions showcasing the work of local students, jewellery making classes and more so keep in touch and come and visit us in store for more information.

As a thank you firstly we would like to say, please have a HUGE slice of birthday cake.

Secondly we are offering 10% off all online orders for the month of September, just use the code BIRTHDAY at the checkout.

Thirdly we are running a competition to win one item of jewellery from each designer we stock, that is 17 pieces of jewellery! All you need to do is like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/jewelleryby and share our page. Compeition winners will be picked on the 30th September and will be notified by Facebook.


Yum!

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

pearls of wisdom

Tears of sharks, heaven's dew, the eyes of the spirit or in fact an examples of the talented mother nature. The origin of pearls has long been the subject of folklore and legend and treasured by man for four thousand years.

Cleopatra wearing pearls
In Roman times they were assosciated with Venus the God of love and so became a currecny and display of love and extravagance. Cleopatra is said to have dipped a pearl in vinegar and drunk it at a dinner party in one display of such extravagance. Such high value was placed on pearls that until the early 20th century a string of pearls could be equivilant to the cost of a yacht or a country mansion.


Though diamond are considered a girls best friend, natural growing pearls are in fact more rare than diamonds.

Natural pearls grow in a mollusc; freshwater pearls in mussels and sea pearls in oysters.

There was a time when Scotland was known for its rose pink pearls and Cumbria for its black pearl. However the mussel colonies on which natutral pearls depend have become so rare that pearling has been banned in the UK river system since 1998. 

Today naturally grown pearls command high prices due to their scarcity, however because of the development of the cultured pearl which is grown with encouragement from humans who implant tiny organic particles into the mollusc’s, this gorgeous gemstone is accesible to all. Mikimoto was the Japanese pioneer who perfected this practise though the actual practise dates back to 5th century China when the undiscerning eyes of travellers along the Silk Road would struggle to discern the natural pearl from its cultured or farmed counterpart.

Pearls are created from nacre, an iridescent liquid which is excreted from a gland inside a mollusc’s when it is irritated by the intrusion of a grain of sand or parasite. Over several years these layers build upon each other, snowballing to create a pearl whose shape resembles that of the original intruder. A perfectly round pearl is rare as are particularly large pearls making them the most expensive. 


One of the world’s most famous pearls, Peregrina, which translates from “pilgrim” is an appropriate name for a gem with five hundred years of history. The enormous silvery luster oval shaped perfect pearl weighs 203.84 grains.  It was purchased for Taylor in 1969 by Richard Burton on Valentines Day for $37,000.00.  

Mary Tudor, Queen of England
 

















Pearls are a delicate gemstone and should be kept away from ammonia, handcreams, soap and ultrasonic cleaners as much as possible. They can be cleaned with a lint free cloth and should be stored in a soft chamois or non abrasive bag to avoid scratching.