|

Diamond
Jewellery
Engagement
Rings
Wedding Rings
Anniversary Gifts
Earrings
Necklaces
Bracelets
Bangles
Baby
& Children's Gifts
Books
for Gifts

Gold Jewellery
Silver Gifts for Men
Gemstone
Jewellery

Learning
Center:
A guide
to help you make the right decision!
|
Pearls
Mollusks
create pearls in a palette of colours, from white to black and almost
everything in between. Pearl colour refers specifically to the colour
of the pearl's body, considered the fundamental colour of the pearl. Colours
generally range from cream, to silver-white, to black. But there are also
colour overtones reflected across a pearl's surface. In fact, the colour
of a pearl more often than not is a meld of its body colour and its overtone,
just as the term "white-rose" will describe a white pearl with a rosy-coloured
hue.

White or Rosé
Coloured Pearls
Akoya cultured pearls
are white lustrous pearls with usually cream or rosé coloured overtones.
These are the classic pearls most often used in pearl strands. Classic
Japanese Akoya cultured pearls come in shades of white, the most valuable
shades being rosé and white. The other shades are white-rose, silver-white
rose, greenish-white rose, and greenish-white.

Freshwater pearls come
in various pastel shades of white, pink, peach, lavender, plum, purple,
and tangerine.

Cream Coloured
Pearls
South Sea cultured pearls
come in shades of lustrous
white, often with silver or rosé overtones. They are larger in size than
the Akoya pearl and are also used in the creation of fine pearl strands
and ropes.

Black or Grey
Coloured Pearls
Black pearls
are known as Tahitian pearls,
and come most often in shades of black and gray. While a Tahitian pearl
has a black body colour, it will vary in its overtones, which most often
will be green or pink. Tahitian cultured pearls differ from other pearls
in one important respect. Yes, they are cultured, as opposed to natural
-- but their black color is naturally produced by the oyster, which makes
them "naturally black" cultured pearls.
What Colour
is the Best?
Colour does not affect
the quality of a pearl, but does affect the perceived beauty of the pearl
according to the individual taste of the "eye of the beholder". Some colours
have become more popular than others in particular markets. For example,
white pearls are the most popular in America, while silver are more sought
after in Asia. This regional colour preference usually has something to
do with the skin tones of the wearers. Most jewelry experts agree that
a buyer's colour choice should be primarily based on what will look good
on the person who will wear the pearls. In generals, pink pearls look
best on fairer skin tones, while yellow or golden pearls look best on
darker skin tones.
Oyster Varieties
Black-Lip
Oyster: An
oyster of unusual size and diameter found in the South Pacific, from which
is derived the famous black pearls known in the industry as Tahitian Pearls.
Other colors produced by this mollusk, besides black, are silver to light
gray, dark gray, orange, gold, green, blue, and purple.
Gold-Lip
Oyster: The
large oyster, found in the waters off Australia, Indonesia, Philippines
and Japan, which produces gold-colored South Sea Pearls.
Pinctada
Fucata: The industry term for the saltwater mollusk that produces
Akoya cultured pearls.
Pinctada
Maxima: The industry term for the White-lip oyster that produces
South Sea Pearls.
Pinctada
Margaritifera: The industry term for the saltwater mollusks that
produces Tahitian cultured pearls.
Uniondae
Hyriopsis Schlegeli: The freshwater mussel, prevalent in China,
which produces a strong pearl with thick nacre and a bright luster. Its
pearls come in a palette of colors ranging through plum, lavender, peach,
apricot, curry, red pepper, cinnamon, celery and sage.
White-Lip
Oyster: Large oysters found in the waters around Australia, Indonesia,
the Philippines and Japan, and producing good-sized South Sea cultured
pearls whose tints include silver-white, pink and cream.
Murray
Forbes Jewellers, 3 Ness Walk,, Inverness IV3 5NE, Phone (01463)
233122
E-mail:info@murrayforbes.co.uk
Members of the National Association for
Goldsmiths
|