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Gemstones

Pearl / Cultured Pearl

I am pearl. I am unique in the world of colored gemstones as I am the only gemstone formed within a living creature. I am a treasured gift of the sea, revered for my color, shape and luster. Old Arabian legend says that I was formed when dewdrops filled with moonlight fell into the ocean and were swallowed by oysters. American Indians found me in the mollusks of the Mississippi River and strung me onto necklaces, adorned their headdresses, and set me into copper ornaments.

Pearls were so cherished by man that as the sources of natural Pearls became exhausted, he learned to cultivate them by implanting an irritant into an oyster.

Today, cultured Pearls are grown and harvested in many parts of the world including the fresh waters of the Tennessee River. The majority of cultured Pearls come from Japan, China and the South Pacific.

Cultured Pearls come in many beautiful colors, from palest creme and white to rose, lilac, green, gold, gray, and the dramatic Tahitian black. Cultured Pearls come in many shapes and sizes, and can be acquired in both graduated and uniform strands. They can be purchased singly or in pairs for rings, pendants and earrings. June birthdays and third and thirtieth anniversaries are celebrated with the gift of Pearls. Click here for the 5 Virtues of Fine Pearls

Enhancements

Pearls have been treasured for their lustrous, creamy textures and their subtle iridescent reflections since the dawn of humankind. Because natural Pearls are so very rare and so very difficult to recover from the ocean's depths, man invented the technique of "culturing" salt and freshwater Pearls from mollusk carefully seeded with irritants similar to those, produced by Nature. This painstaking effort of "culturing" is one of the most dramatic examples of man's quest to coax beauty from Nature.

One of the earliest known methods to enhance a Pearl's color and luster required that a chicken swallow the Pearl. The belief at that time (400 AD) was that the chicken's digestive system would soften the Pearl's blemishes and even the color. Today, cultured, freshwater and saltwater Pearls are often bleached to achieve a uniform color. They may also be polished in tumblers to clean and improve their luster.

Naturally colored cultured Pearls are in short supply. Some cultured Pearls are dyed and/or irradiated to achieve the rich blacks, grayish blues, pinks and golden hues that are now so much in demand. To care for your cultured Pearls, avoid using perfume, hairspray, abrasives, solvents and polish removers while wearing them. Ask your jeweler for further instructions regarding their care.






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