Pregled posta

Adresa bloga: https://blog.dnevnik.hr/batterysesamerena

Marketing

Yellow Gold Akoya Pearl Ring


Yellow Gold Akoya Pearl Ring : Mens Rings Sterling Silver.


yellow gold akoya pearl ring







    yellow gold
  • Gold, also called golden, is one of a variety of orange-yellow color blends used to give the impression of the color of the element gold.

  • The most popular gold alloy. An alloy of gold, silver, copper, and often zinc.

  • While pure gold is yellow in color, colored gold can be developed into various colors. These colors are generally obtained by alloying gold with other elements in various proportions.





    akoya pearl
  • (Akoya pearls) are produced by Akoya oysters in Japan and China. Depending on the size of the oyster, a pearl’s size can vary between 2mm to 10mm. The color ranges from white, cream, pink, green, silver, to gold.

  • A pearl from the saltwater akoya-gai oyster (Pinctada martensii); “Japanese pearl.”

  • (Akoya pearls) are saltwater cultured pearls of Japanese origin and are formed by the Akoya oyster.





    ring
  • A telephone call

  • An act of causing a bell to sound, or the resonant sound caused by this

  • Each of a series of resonant or vibrating sounds signaling an incoming telephone call

  • a toroidal shape; "a ring of ships in the harbor"; "a halo of smoke"

  • a characteristic sound; "it has the ring of sincerity"

  • sound loudly and sonorously; "the bells rang"











yellow gold akoya pearl ring - Ruby Japanese


Ruby Japanese Akoya Cultured Pearl Yellow Gold Ring



Ruby Japanese Akoya Cultured Pearl Yellow Gold Ring





Set in 14K gold pearl ring features a perfectly round, perfectly clean white pearl set aside a gold. The roundest, cleanest, finest "AA Quality" Japanese Akoya cultured pearl ring is carefully selected from each harvest by American Pearl's pearl sorters. If she doesn't already own a pearl pendant, you've landed upon a missing item in her jewelry wardrobe. This cultured pearl pendant are the perfect size, bodycolor and overtone. Set in 14K gold. Before setting these pearls in gold, American Pearl jewelers make sure these pearls are fully formed, perfectly round spheres unlike the three-quarter cut pearls that are worth half as much sold by others. Featured in silver overtones. Overtones are the tint or color that overlay the bodycolor. Tiffany & Co. is famed for selling the silver overtones, where as Mikimoto prefers rose overtones.






78% (9)










Multicolour Cultured Freshwater Pearl Necklace




Multicolour Cultured Freshwater Pearl Necklace







Pearl Gemstone Benefits

The English word ‘Pearl’ comes from Middle English and from old French ‘Perle’.
The Greek word is Margarites. In ancient times, these were considered holy pearl names and Mararita was often used for baby girls of the pious and for beautified saints in the Christian lands.
Female forms of Margarites=Pearl
Italian: Margherita and Rita
French: Marguerite and Margot
German: Margarethe, Gretchen and Gretal
English: Margaret, Marjorie, Madge and Margie
Men's titles derived from Margarites=Pearl
Gareth and Garrett
Two patron saints who were rechristened as "pearls," were:
St. Margaret Aethling of Scotland
Margeret, "the pearl of Bohemia," beloved of the Danes.

A pearl is a hard,lustrous spherical mass,whiter or bluish grey,formed within the soft tissue (specifically the mantle) of a living oyster or bivalre mollusc. Just like the shell of a mollusk, a pearl is made up of calcium carbonate in minute crystalline form, which has been deposited in concentric layers. The ideal pearl is perfectly rounded and smooth, but many other shapes of pearls occur. The finest quality natural pearls have been highly valued as gemstones and objects of beauty for many centuries, and because of this, the word pearl has become a metaphor for something very rare, fine, admirable, valuable or genuine.
Valuable pearls occur in the ocean, but they are now very rare. Cultured or farmed pearls from pearl oysters make up the majority of those that are currently sold in the international markets. Pearls from the sea are valued more highly than freshwater pearls. Imitation or fake pearls are also widely sold in inexpensive costume jewelry, but the quality of their iridescence is usually very poor and, generally speaking, artificial pearls are easily distinguished from genuine pearls. Pearls have been harvested and cultivated primarily for use in jewelry, but in the past they were also stitched onto formal or ornamental clothing worn on special occasions. Pearls have also been crushed and used in cosmetics, medicines, or in paint formulations.
Cultured Pearl is artificially created by planting a core or nucleus into pearl oysters. Today almost all pearls used for jewelery are cultured. They are usually harvested three years after planting, but it can take up to as long as six years before a pearl is produced. This process was first developed by Kokichi Mikimoto in Japan. He patented it in 1896.
The nucleus is generally a polished bead made from a missel shell. Along with a small scrap of mantle tissue from another oyester to serve as an irritant, it is surgically implanted near the oyester’s genitals. Oyesters that survive the subsequent surgery to remove the finished pearl are often implanted with a new, larger nucleus. They are then returned to water for another three years of growth.
Fresh Water Pearl is produced in fresh water (mainly in China). They are oblong and, due to lack of hardness, wear out very fast and lose their luster.
Pearl found in
The finest pearls are found in the Persian Gulf. Other notable sources of fine-quality pearls are the Gulf of Mannar between India and Sri Lanka, the waters off Celebes, Indonesia, and the islands of the South Pacific. In the Americas the Gulf of California, the Gulf of Mexico, and the waters of the Pacific coast of Mexico have yielded dark-hued pearls with a metallic sheen as well as white pearls of good quality.
Freshwater mussels in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere have produced pearls of great value, as for example those from the Mississippi River. Pearling is a carefully fostered industry in central Europe, and the forest streams of Bavaria, in particular, are the source of choice pearls. Freshwater pearling in China has been known from before 1000 BC.
Recent Pearl Production

China has recently overtaken Japan in Akoya pearl production. Japan has all but ceased its production of Akoya pearls smaller than 8 mm. However, Japan maintains its status as a pearl processing center and imports the majority of Chinese Akoya pearl production. These pearls are then processed, often simply matched and sorted, relabeled as product of Japan and exported in the international markets.
In the past couple of decades, cultured pearls have been produced using larger oysters in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean. The largest pearl oyster is the Pinctada maxima, which is roughly the size of a dinner plate. South Sea pearls are characterized by their large size and warm luster. Sizes up to 14 mm in diameter are not uncommon. South Sea pearls are primarily produced in Australia, Indonesia and the Philippines.
A genuine pearl is supposed to have the following qualities:
• Moonlike, shining white color
• Perfectly round, globular shape and size
• Spotlessness and freedom from blemishes (dents, scratches, ridges) and impurities.
• Compactness, which gives it a high specific gravity.
• Lustre, soft glamor, attractiveness and brilliance of reflection













Yellow Gold




Yellow Gold







This is a close-up of a flower-head that was with several others in a vase in the house. This golden-coloured flower looked good in this photo....hence the name "Yellow Gold"











yellow gold akoya pearl ring







See also:

where can i buy mood rings

ring size tool

change ring size

cartier honeymoon engagement ring

engagement ring with split shank

double tongue ring

mosaic opal ring

4 gauge tongue rings





Post je objavljen 01.09.2011. u 06:49 sati.