A pearl is a hard object
produced within the soft tissue (specifically the mantle) of a living shelled
mollusc. Just like the shell of a clam, a pearl is made up of calcium carbonate
in minute crystalline form, which has been deposited in concentric layers. The
ideal pearl is perfectly round and smooth, but many other shapes of pearls
(baroque 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, and valuable.
The most valuable pearls occur
spontaneously in the wild, but they are extremely rare. These wild pearls are
referred to as natural pearls. Cultured or farmed pearls from pearl oysters and
freshwater mussels make up the majority of those that are currently sold.
Imitation pearls are also widely sold in inexpensive jewelry, but the quality
of their iridescence is usually very poor, and often, 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 lavish clothing. Pearls have also been crushed and used in
cosmetics, medicines, and in paint formulations.
Whether wild or cultured, gem
quality pearls are almost always nacreous and iridescent, as is the interior of
the shell that produces them. However, almost all species of shelled molluscs
are capable of producing pearls (formally referred to as "calcareous
concretions" by some sources) of lesser shine or less spherical shape.
Although these may also be legitimately referred to as "pearls" by
gemological labs and also under U.S. Federal Trade Commission rules, and are
formed in the same way, most of them have no value, except as curiosities.
Evolutionary
significance
A pearl being extracted from an
akoya pearl oyster.
A black pearl and a shell of the
black-lipped pearl oyster. The iridescent colors originate from nacre layers.
Pearls are commonly viewed by
scientists as a by-product of an adaptive immune system-like function.
Etymology
The English word pearl comes
from the French perle, originally from the Latin perna meaning
leg, after the ham- or mutton leg-shaped bivalve.
Definition
Almost any shelled mollusk can, by
natural processes, produce some kind of "pearl" when an irritating
microscopic object becomes trapped within the mollusk's mantle folds, but the
great majority of these "pearls" are not valued as gemstones.
Nacreous pearls, the best-known and most commercially-significant pearls, are
primarily produced by two groups of molluscan bivalves or clams. A nacreous
pearl is made from layers of nacre, by the same living process as is used in
the secretion of the mother of pearl which lines the shell.
A "natural pearl" or
"wild pearl" is one that forms without any human intervention at all,
in the wild, and is very rare. Many hundreds of pearl oysters or pearl mussels
have to be gathered and opened, and thus killed, to find even one wild pearl,
and for many centuries that was the only way pearls were obtained. This was the
main reason why pearls fetched such extraordinary prices in the past. A
cultured pearl is formed in a pearl farm, using human intervention as well as
natural processes.
One family of nacreous pearl
bivalves – the pearl oyster – lives in the sea, while the other – a very
different group of bivalves – lives in freshwater; these are the river mussels
such as the freshwater pearl mussel. Saltwater pearls can grow in several
species of marine pearl oysters in the family Pteriidae. Freshwater pearls grow
within certain (but by no means all) species of freshwater mussels in the order
Unionida, the families Unionidae and Margaritiferidae.
Structure of nacre layers, wherein
aragonite plates are separated by biopolymers, such as chitin, lustrin and
silk-like proteins
Physical
properties
Electron microscopy image of a
fractured surface of nacre
The unique luster of pearls depends
upon the reflection, refraction, and diffraction of light from the translucent
layers. The thinner and more numerous the layers in the pearl, the finer the
luster. The iridescence that pearls display is caused by the overlapping of
successive layers, which breaks up light falling on the surface. In addition,
pearls (especially cultured freshwater pearls) can be dyed yellow, green, blue,
brown, pink, purple, or black. The very best pearls have a metallic mirror-like
luster.
Because pearls are made primarily of
calcium carbonate, they can be dissolved in vinegar. Calcium carbonate is
susceptible to even a weak acid solution because the crystals of calcium
carbonate react with the acetic acid in the vinegar to form calcium acetate and
carbon dioxide.
Freshwater
and saltwater pearls
Freshwater and saltwater pearls may
sometimes look quite similar, but they come from different sources.
Freshwater pearls form in various
species of freshwater mussels, family Unionidae, which live in lakes, rivers,
ponds and other bodies of fresh water. These freshwater pearl mussels occur not
only in hotter climates, but also in colder more temperate areas such as
Scotland (where they are totally protected under law). However, most freshwater
cultured pearls sold today come from China.
Saltwater pearls grow within pearl
oysters, family Pteriidae, which live in oceans. Saltwater pearl oysters are
usually cultivated in protected lagoons or volcanic atolls.
Creation
of a pearl
Diagram comparing a cross-section of
a cultured pearl, upper, with a natural pearl, lower
The difference between wild and
cultured pearls focuses on whether the pearl was created spontaneously by
nature – without human intervention – or with human aid. Pearls are
formed inside the shell of certain mollusks as a defense mechanism against a
potentially threatening irritant such as a parasite inside its shell, or an
attack from outside, injuring the mantle tissue. The mollusk creates a pearl
sac to seal off the irritation.
The mantle of the mollusk deposits
layers of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) in the form of the mineral
aragonite or a mixture of aragonite and calcite (polymorphs with the same
chemical formula, but different crystal structures) held together by an organic
horn-like compound called conchiolin. The combination of aragonite and conchiolin
is called nacre, which makes up mother-of-pearl. The commonly held belief that
a grain of sand acts as the irritant is in fact rarely the case. Typical
stimuli include organic material, parasites, or even damage that displaces
mantle tissue to another part of the mollusk's body. These small particles or
organisms gain entry when the shell valves are open for feeding or respiration.
In cultured pearls, the irritant is typically an introduced piece of the mantle
epithelium, with or without a spherical bead (beaded or beadless cultured
pearls).
Natural
pearls
Natural pearls are nearly 100%
calcium carbonate and conchiolin. It is thought that natural pearls form under
a set of accidental conditions when a microscopic intruder or parasite enters a
bivalve mollusk, and settles inside the shell. The mollusk, being irritated by
the intruder, forms a pearl sac of external mantle tissue cells and secretes
the calcium carbonate and conchiolin to cover the irritant. This secretion
process is repeated many times, thus producing a pearl. Natural pearls come in
many shapes, with perfectly round ones being comparatively rare.
Typically, the build-up of a natural
pearl consists of a brown central zone formed by columnar calcium carbonate
(usually calcite, sometimes columnar aragonite) and a yellowish to white outer
zone consisting of nacre (tabular aragonite). In a pearl cross-section such as
the diagram, these two different materials can be seen. The presence of
columnar calcium carbonate rich in organic material indicates juvenile mantle
tissue that formed during the early stage of pearl development. Displaced
living cells with a well-defined task may continue to perform their function in
their new location, often resulting in a cyst. Such displacement may occur via
an injury. The fragile rim of the shell is exposed and is prone to damage and
injury. Crabs, other predators and parasites such as worm larvae may produce
traumatic attacks and cause injuries in which some external mantle tissue cells
are disconnected from their layer. Embedded in the conjunctive tissue of the
mantle, these cells may survive and form a small pocket in which they continue
to secrete their natural product: calcium carbonate. The pocket is called a
pearl sack, and grows with time by cell division; in this way the pearl grows
also. The juvenile mantle tissue cells, according to their stage of growth,
produce columnar calcium carbonate, which is secreted from the inner surface of
the pearl sack. With ongoing time the external mantle cells of the pearl sack
proceed to the formation of tabular aragonite. When the transition to nacre
secretion occurs, the brown pebble becomes covered with a nacreous coating. As
this process progresses, the shell itself grows, and the pearl sack seems to
travel into the shell. However, it actually stays in its original relative
position within the mantle tissue. After a couple of years, a pearl will have
formed and the shell might be found by a lucky pearl fisher.
Cultured
pearls
Nuclei from Toba Pearl Island, Japan
Cultured pearls are the response of
the shell to a tissue implant. A tiny piece of mantle tissue from a donor shell
is transplanted into a recipient shell. This graft will form a pearl sac and
the tissue will precipitate calcium carbonate into this pocket. There are a
number of options for producing cultured pearls: use freshwater or seawater
shells, transplant the graft into the mantle or into the gonad, add a spherical
bead or do it non-beaded. The majority of saltwater cultured pearls are grown
with beads. The trade name of the cultured pearls are Akoya, white or golden
South sea, and black Tahitian. The majority of beadless cultured pearls are
mantle-grown in freshwater shells in China, known as freshwater cultured
pearls.
Cultured pearls can be distinguished
from natural pearls by X-ray examination. Nucleated cultured pearls are often
'pre-formed' as they tend to follow the shape of the implanted shell bead
nucleus. Once the pre-formed beads are inserted into the oyster, it secretes a
few layers of nacre around the outside surface of the implant before it is
removed after six months or more.
When a cultured pearl with bead is
X-rayed, it reveals a different structure to that of a natural pearl. A beaded
cultured pearl shows a solid center with no concentric growth rings, whereas a
natural pearl shows a series of concentric growth rings. A beadless cultured
pearl (whether of freshwater or saltwater origin) may show growth rings, but
also a complex central cavity, witness of the first precipitation of the young
pearl sac.
Imitation
pearls
Some imitation pearls are simply
made of mother-of-pearl, coral or conch shell, while others are made from glass
and are coated with a solution containing fish scales called essence d'Orient.
Although imitation pearls look the part, they do not have the same weight or
smoothness as real pearls, and their luster will also dim greatly.
Gemological
identification
A well-equipped gem testing
laboratory can distinguish natural pearls from cultured pearls by using
gemological X-ray equipment to examine the center of a pearl. With X-rays it is
possible to see the growth rings of the pearl, where the layers of calcium
carbonate are separated by thin layers of conchiolin. The differentiation of
natural pearls from non-beaded cultured pearls can be very difficult without
the use of this X-ray technique.
Natural and cultured pearls can be
distinguished from imitation pearls using a microscope. Another method of
testing for imitations is to rub two pearls against each other. Imitation pearls
are completely smooth, but natural and cultured pearls are composed of nacre
platelets, making both feel slightly gritty.
Value
of a natural pearl
A brooch and a set of earrings from
the 19th century made from gold and natural pearls
Quality natural pearls are very rare
jewels. The actual value of a natural pearl is determined in the same way as it
would be for other "precious" gems. The valuation factors include
size, shape, color, quality of surface, orient and luster.
Single, natural pearls are often
sold as a collector's item, or set as centerpieces in unique jewelry. Very few
matched strands of natural pearls exist, and those that do often sell for
hundreds of thousands of dollars. (In 1917, jeweler Pierre Cartier purchased
the Fifth Avenue mansion that is now the New York Cartier store in exchange for
a matched, double strand of natural pearls that he had been collecting for
years; valued at the time at $1 million USD.)
The Great Depression effectively
slashed the value of the natural pearl, but there is no doubt that it had been
some time coming. The introduction and advance of the cultured pearl hit the
pearl industry hard; it had pearl dealers publicly disputing over the
authenticity of these new cultured pearls, and left many consumers uneasy and
confused about the much lower prices. Essentially, it damaged the image of both
natural and cultured pearls alike. By the 1950s, an era of every woman being
able to own her own pearl necklace had begun, and natural pearls were reduced
to a small, exclusive niche in the pearl industry.
Origin
of a natural pearl
Previously, natural pearls were
found in many parts of the world. Present day natural pearling is confined
mostly to seas off Bahrain. Australia also has one of the world's last
remaining fleets of pearl diving ships. Australian pearl divers dive for south
sea pearl oysters to be used in the cultured south sea pearl industry. The
catch of pearl oysters is similar to the numbers of oysters taken during the
natural pearl days. Hence significant numbers of natural pearls are still found
in the Australian Indian Ocean waters from wild oysters. X-ray examination is
required to positively verify natural pearls found today.
Types
of cultured pearls
A blister pearl, a half-sphere,
formed flush against the shell of the pearl oyster.
Keshi pearls, although they often
occur by chance, are not considered natural pearls. They are a byproduct of the
culturing process, and hence do not happen without human intervention. These
pearls are quite small: typically a few millimeters in size. Keshi pearls are
produced by many different types of marine mollusks and freshwater mussels in
China. Keshi pearls are actually a mistake in the cultured pearl seeding
process. In seeding the cultured pearl, a piece of mantle muscle from a
sacrificed oyster is placed with a bead of mother of pearl within the oyster.
If the piece of mantle should slip off the bead, a pearl forms of baroque shape
about the mantle piece which is entirely nacre. Therefore, a Keshi pearl could be
considered superior to cultured pearls with a mother of pearl bead center. In
the cultured pearl industry, the resources used to create a mistaken all nacre
baroque pearl is a drain on the production of round cultured pearls. Therefore,
they are trying to improve culturing technique so that keshi pearls do not
occur. All nacre pearls may one day be limited to natural found pearls. Today
many "keshi" pearls are actually intentional, with post-harvest
shells returned to the water to regenerate a pearl in the existing pearl sac.
Tahitian pearls, frequently referred
to as black pearls, are highly valued because of their rarity; the culturing
process for them dictates a smaller volume output and they can never be mass
produced because, in common with most sea pearls, the oyster can only be
nucleated with one pearl at a time, while freshwater mussels are capable of
multiple pearl implants. Before the days of cultured pearls, black pearls were
rare and highly valued for the simple reason that white pearl oysters rarely
produced naturally black pearls, and black pearl oysters rarely produced any
natural pearls at all.
Mary, Queen of Scots by an unknown artist after François Clouet (c. 1559)
London, Victoria and Albert Museum
London, Victoria and Albert Museum
The Queen is shown wearing her rope of
famous black pearls.
Since the development of pearl
culture technology, the black pearl oyster found in Tahiti and many other
Pacific Island areas has been extensively used for producing cultured pearls.
The rarity of the black cultured pearl is now a "comparative" issue.
The black cultured pearl is rare when compared to Chinese freshwater cultured
pearls, and Japanese and Chinese akoya cultured pearls, and is more valuable
than these pearls. However, it is more abundant than the South Sea pearl, which
is more valuable than the black cultured pearl. This is simply because the
black pearl oyster Pinctada margaritifera is far more abundant than the
elusive, rare, and larger south sea pearl oyster Pinctada maxima, which
cannot be found in lagoons, but which must be dove for in a rare number of deep
ocean habitats or grown in hatcheries.
Black pearls are very rarely black:
they are usually shades of green, purple, aubergine, blue, grey, silver or
peacock (a mix of several shades, like a peacock's feather).
Black cultured pearls from the black
pearl oyster – Pinctada margaritifera – are not South Sea
pearls, although they are often mistakenly described as black South Sea pearls.
In the absence of an official definition for the pearl from the black oyster,
these pearls are usually referred to as "black pearls".
The correct definition of a South
Sea pearl – as described by CIBJO and GIA – is a pearl produced by
the Pinctada maxima pearl oyster. South Sea pearls are the color of
their host Pinctada maxima oyster – and can be white, silver, pink,
gold, cream, and any combination of these basic colors, including overtones of
the various colors of the rainbow displayed in the pearl nacre of the oyster
shell itself.
South Sea pearls are produced in
various parts of the world. White ones tend to come from the Broome area of
Australia while golden ones are from the Philippines. Pearls are also produced
in the Cook Islands and one farm in the Sea of Cortez, Mexico, from Concha
Nácar the rainbow lipped oyster; these pearls fluoresce red under ultraviolet
light.
Pearls
from other species
A shell of the Indian volute, Melo
melo, surrounded by a number of pearls from this species
Biologically speaking, under the
right set of circumstances, almost any shelled mollusk can produce some kind of
pearl, however, most of these molluscan pearls have no luster or iridescence.
The great majority of mollusk species produce pearls which are not attractive,
and are sometimes not even very durable, such that they usually have no value
at all, except perhaps to a scientist, a collector, or as a curiosity. These
objects used to be referred to as "calcareous concretions" by some
gemologists, even though a malacologist would still consider them to be pearls.
Valueless pearls of this type are sometimes found in edible mussels, edible
oysters, escargot snails, and so on. The GIA and CIBJO now simply use the term
'pearl' (or, where appropriate, the more descriptive term 'non-nacreous pearl')
when referring to such items and, under Federal Trade Commission rules, various
mollusc pearls may be referred to as 'pearls', without qualification.
Pearl of Lao Tzu, the largest known
pearl came from a giant clam
A few species produce pearls that
can be of interest as gemstones. These species include the bailer shell Melo,
the giant clam Tridacna, various scallop species, Pen shells Pinna,
and the Haliotis iris species of abalone. Abalone, or Pāua are Mabe pearls
unique to New Zealand waters and are commonly referred to as 'Blue Pearls'. They
are admired for their incredible luster and naturally bright vibrant colors
that are often compared to Opal. Another example is the conch pearl (sometimes
referred to simply as the 'pink pearl'), which is found very rarely growing
between the mantle and the shell of the queen conch or pink conch, Strombus
gigas, a large sea snail or marine gastropod from the Caribbean Sea. These
pearls, which are often pink in color, are a by-product of the conch fishing
industry, and the best of them display a shimmering optical effect related to
chatoyance known as 'flame structure'. In 1999, the world auction record for a
Melo pearl was US$488,311 for a single pearl.
Somewhat similar gastropod pearls,
this time more orange in hue, are (again very rarely) found in the horse conch Pleuroploca
gigantea.
The largest pearl known was found in
the Philippines in 1934 and is known as the Pearl of Lao Tzu. It is a
naturally-occurring, non-nacreous, calcareous concretion (pearl) from a giant
clam. Because it did not grow in a pearl oyster it is not pearly; instead the
surface is glossy like porcelain. Other pearls from giant clams are known to
exist, but this is a particularly large one, weighing 14 lb (6.4 kg).
History
Pearl
hunting
A 14th-century piece of clothing
used by Kuwaiti divers searching for pearls in the Arabian Sea
For thousands of years, most
seawater pearls were retrieved by divers working in the Indian Ocean, in areas
like the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, and in the Gulf of Mannar. Starting in the
Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD), the Chinese hunted extensively for seawater pearls
in the South China Sea. In the 14th-century Arabian Sea, the traveller Ibn
Battuta provided the earliest known description of pearl diving by means of
attaching a cord to the diver's waist.
Catching of pearls, Bern Physiologus (9th century)
When Spanish conquistadors arrived
in the Western Hemisphere, they discovered that around the islands of Cubagua
and Margarita, some 200 km north of the Venezuelan coast, was an extensive
pearl bed (a bed of pearl oysters). One discovered and named pearl, La
Peregrina pearl, was offered to the Spanish queen. According to Garcilasso de
la Vega, who says that he saw La Peregrina at Seville in 1607, (Garcilasso,
"Historie des Incas, Rois du Perou," Amsterdam, 1704, Vol. II, P.
352.) this was found at Panama in 1560 by a slave worker who was rewarded with
his liberty, and his owner with the office of alcalde of Panama.
Margarita pearls are extremely
difficult to find today and are known for their unique yellowish color. The
most famous Margarita necklace that any one can see today is the one that then
Venezuelan President Romulo Betancourt gave to Jacqueline Kennedy when she and
her husband, President John F. Kennedy paid an official visit to Venezuela.
Before the beginning of the 20th
century, pearl hunting was the most common way of harvesting pearls. Divers
manually pulled oysters from ocean floors and river bottoms and checked them
individually for pearls. Not all mussels and oysters produce pearls. In a haul
of three tons, only three or four oysters will produce perfect pearls.
Pearl
farming
Today, the cultured pearls on the
market can be divided into two categories. The first category covers the beaded
cultured pearls, including Akoya, South Sea and Tahiti. These pearls are gonad
grown, and usually one pearl is grown at a time. This limits the number of
pearls at a harvest period. The pearls are usually harvested after one year for
akoya, 2–4 years for Tahitian and South Sea, and 2–7 years for freshwater. This
perliculture process was first developed by the British biologist William
Saville-Kent who passed the information along to Tatsuhei Mise and Tokichi
Nishikawa from Japan. The second category includes the non-beaded freshwater
cultured pearls, like the Biwa or Chinese pearls. As they grow in the mantle,
where on each wing up to 25 grafts can be implanted, these pearls are much more
frequent and saturate the market completely. An impressive improvement in
quality has taken place in the last ten years when the former rice grain-shaped
pebbles are compared with the near round pearls of today. In the last two years
large near perfect round bead nucleated pearls up to 15mm in diameter have been
produced with metallic luster.
The nucleus bead in a beaded cultured
pearl is generally a polished sphere made from freshwater mussel shell. Along
with a small piece of mantle tissue from another mollusk (donor shell) to serve
as a catalyst for the pearl sac, it is surgically implanted into the gonad
(reproductive organ) of a saltwater mollusk. In freshwater perliculture, only
the piece of tissue is used in most cases, and is inserted into the fleshy
mantle of the host mussel. South Sea and Tahitian pearl oysters, also known as Pinctada
maxima and Pinctada margaritifera, which survive the subsequent
surgery to remove the finished pearl, are often implanted with a new, larger
beads as part of the same procedure and then returned to the water for another
2–3 years of growth.
Despite the common misperception,
Mikimoto did not discover the process of pearl culture. The accepted process of
pearl culture was developed by the British Biologist William Saville-Kent in
Australia and brought to Japan by Tokichi Nishikawa and Tatsuhei Mise.
Nishikawa was granted the patent in 1916, and married the daughter of Mikimoto.
Mikimoto was able to use Nishikawa's technology. After the patent was granted
in 1916, the technology was immediately commercially applied to akoya pearl
oysters in Japan in 1916. Mise's brother was the first to produce a commercial
crop of pearls in the akoya oyster. Mitsubishi's Baron Iwasaki immediately
applied the technology to the south sea pearl oyster in 1917 in the
Philippines, and later in Buton, and Palau. Mitsubishi was the first to produce
a cultured south sea pearl – although it was not until 1928 that the first
small commercial crop of pearls was successfully produced.
The original Japanese cultured
pearls, known as akoya pearls, are produced by a species of small pearl oyster,
Pinctada fucata martensii, which is no bigger than 6 to 8 cm in
size, hence akoya pearls larger than 10 mm in diameter are extremely rare
and highly priced. Today, a hybrid mollusk is used in both Japan and China in
the production of akoya pearls.
Recent
pearl production
In 2010, China overtook Japan in
akoya pearl production. Japan has all but ceased its production of akoya pearls
smaller than 8 mm. Japan maintains its status as a pearl processing
center, however, 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 past two 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.
Mitsubishi commenced pearl culture
with the south sea pearl oyster in 1916, as soon as the technology patent was
commercialized. By 1931 this project was showing signs of success, but was
upset by the death of Tatsuhei Mise. Although the project was recommenced after
Tatsuhei's death, the project was discontinued at the beginning of WWII before
significant productions of pearls were achieved.
After WWII, new south sea pearl
projects were commenced in the early 1950s in Burma and Kuri Bay and Port Essington
in Australia. Japanese companies were involved in all projects using
technicians from the original Mitsubishi south sea pre-war projects.
Freshwater
pearl farming
In 1914, pearl farmers began growing
cultured freshwater pearls using the pearl mussels native to Lake Biwa. This
lake, the largest and most ancient in Japan, lies near the city of Kyoto. The
extensive and successful use of the Biwa Pearl Mussel is reflected in the name Biwa
pearls, a phrase which was at one time nearly synonymous with freshwater
pearls in general. Since the time of peak production in 1971, when Biwa pearl
farmers produced six tons of cultured pearls, pollution has caused the virtual
extinction of the industry. Japanese pearl farmers recently cultured a hybrid
pearl mussel – a cross between Biwa Pearl Mussels and a closely related
species from China, Hyriopsis cumingi, in Lake Kasumigaura. This
industry has also nearly ceased production, due to pollution.
Japanese pearl producers also
invested in producing cultured pearls with freshwater mussels in the region of
Shanghai, China. China has since become the world's largest producer of
freshwater pearls, producing more than 1,500 metric tons per year (in addition
to metric measurements, Japanese units of measurement such as the kan and momme
are sometimes encountered in the pearl industry).
Led by pearl pioneer John
Latendresse and his wife Chessy, the United States began farming cultured
freshwater pearls in the mid 1960s. National Geographic magazine
introduced the American cultured pearl as a commercial product in their August
1985 issue. The Tennessee pearl farm has emerged as a tourist destination in
recent years, but commercial production of freshwater pearls has ceased.
Momme
Weight
For many cultured pearl dealers and
wholesalers, the preferred weight measure used for loose pearls and pearl
strands is momme. Momme is a weight measure used by the Japanese for centuries.
Today, momme weight is still the standard unit of measure used by most pearl
dealers to communicate with pearl producers and wholesalers. One momme
corresponds to 1/1000 kan. Reluctant to give up tradition, in 1891, the
Japanese government formalized the kan measure as being exactly 1 kan = 3.75
kilograms or 8.28 pounds. Hence, 1 momme = 3.75 grams or 3750 milligrams.
In the United States, during the
19th and 20th centuries, through trade with Japan in silk cloth the momme
became a unit indicating the quality of silk cloth.
Though millimeter size range is
typically the first factor in determining a cultured pearl necklace's value,
the momme weight of pearl necklace will allow the buyer to quickly determine if
the necklace is properly proportioned. This is especially true when comparing
the larger south sea and Tahitian pearl necklaces.
Pearls
in jewelry
Ring of Tahitian pearl
The value of the pearls in jewelry
is determined by a combination of the luster, color, size, lack of surface flaw
and symmetry that are appropriate for the type of pearl under consideration.
Among those attributes, luster is the most important differentiator of pearl
quality according to jewelers.
All factors being equal, however,
the larger the pearl the more valuable it is. Large, perfectly round pearls are
rare and highly valued. Teardrop-shaped pearls are often used in pendants.
Shapes
Pearls come in eight basic shapes:
round, semi-round, button, drop, pear, oval, baroque, and circled. Perfectly
round pearls are the rarest and most valuable shape. Semi-rounds are also used
in necklaces or in pieces where the shape of the pearl can be disguised to look
like it is a perfectly round pearl. Button pearls are like a slightly flattened
round pearl and can also make a necklace, but are more often used in single
pendants or earrings where the back half of the pearl is covered, making it
look like a larger, rounder pearl.
Portrait of Empress Maria
Fiodorovna in a Head-Dress Decorated with Pearls by Ivan Kramskoi
(1880s)
Saint Petersburg, Hermitage Museum
Saint Petersburg, Hermitage Museum
Drop and pear shaped pearls are
sometimes referred to as teardrop pearls and are most often seen in earrings,
pendants, or as a center pearl in a necklace. Baroque pearls have a different
appeal; they are often highly irregular with unique and interesting shapes.
They are also commonly seen in necklaces. Circled pearls are characterized by
concentric ridges, or rings, around the body of the pearl.
In general, cultured pearls are less
valuable than natural pearls, whereas imitation pearls almost have no value.
One way that jewelers can determine whether a pearl is cultured or natural is
to have a gemlab perform an X-ray examination of the pearl. If X-rays reveals a
nucleus, the pearl is likely a bead-nucleated saltwater pearl. If no nucleus is
present, but irregular and small dark inner spots indicating a cavity are
visible, combined with concentric rings of organic substance, the pearl is
likely a cultured freshwater. Cultured freshwater pearls can often be confused
for natural pearls which present as homogeneous pictures which continuously
darken toward the surface of the pearl. Natural pearls will often show larger
cavities where organic matter has dried out and decomposed.
Lengths
of pearl necklaces
Portrait of Caterina Sagredo
Barbarigo by Rosalba Carriera, cir. 1740. The subject is wearing a
single-strand pearl collar and pendant pearl earrings
Queen of Italy, Margherita of Savoy,
owned one of the most famous collections of natural pearls. She is wearing a
multi-strand choker and a rope of pearls, possibly with matching bracelet and
earrings
There is a special vocabulary used
to describe the length of pearl necklaces. While most other necklaces are
simply referred to by their physical measurement, pearl necklaces are named by
how low they hang when worn around the neck. A collar, measuring 10 to
13 inches or 25 to 33 cm in length, sits directly against the throat
and does not hang down the neck at all; collars are often made up of multiple
strands of pearls. Pearl chokers, measuring 14 to 16 inches or 35
to 41 cm in length, nestle just at the base of the neck. A strand called a
princess length, measuring 17 to 19 inches or 43 to 48 cm in
length, comes down to or just below the collarbone. A matinee length,
measuring 20 to 24 inches or 50 to 60 cm in length, falls just above
the breasts. An opera length, measuring 28 to 35 inches or 70 to
90 cm in length, will be long enough to reach the breastbone or sternum of
the wearer; and longer still, a pearl rope, measuring more than
45 inches or 115 cm in length, is any length that falls down farther
than an opera.
Necklaces can also be classified as
uniform, or graduated. In a uniform strand of pearls, all pearls are classified
as the same size, but actually fall in a range. A uniform strand of akoya
pearls, for example, will measure within 0.5 mm. So a strand will never be
7 mm, but will be 6.5–7 mm. Freshwater pearls, Tahitian pearls, and
South Sea pearls all measure to a full millimeter when considered uniform.
A graduated strand of pearls most
often has at least 3 mm of differentiation from the ends to the center of
the necklace. Popularized in the United States during the 1950s by the GIs
bringing strands of cultured akoya pearls home from Japan, a 3.5 momme,
3 mm to 7 mm graduated strand was much more affordable than a uniform
strand because most of the pearls were small.
Colors
of pearl jewelry
Earrings and necklaces can also be
classified on the grade of the color of the pearl. While white, and more
recently black, saltwater pearls are by far the most popular, other color tints
can be found on pearls from the oceans. Pink, blue, champagne, green, black and
even purple saltwater pearls can be encountered, but to collect enough of these
rare colors to form a complete string of the same size and same shade can take
years.
Religious
references
Hindu
scriptures
The Hindu tradition describes the
sacred Nine Pearls which were first documented in the Garuda Purana, one of the
books of the Hindu mythology. Ayurveda contains references to pearl powder as a
stimulant of digestion and to treat mental ailments. According to Marco Polo,
the kings of Malabar wore a necklace of 104 rubies and pearls which was given
from one generation of kings to the next. The reason was that every king had to
say 104 prayers every morning and every evening. At least until the beginning
of the 20th century it was a Hindu custom to present a completely new,
undrilled pearl and pierce it during the wedding ceremony.
The Pearl or Mukta in Sanskrit is
also associated with many Hindu deities. The most famous being the Koustubha
which Lord Vishnu wears on his chest. Apart from religious connotations,
stories and folklore abound of pearls occurring in snakes, the Naaga Mani, and
elephants, the Gaja Mukta.
Hebrew
scriptures
According to Rebbenu Bachya, the
word Yahalom in the verse Exodus 28:18 means "pearl" and was
the stone on the Hoshen representing the tribe of Zebulun. This is generally
disputed among scholars, particularly since the word in question in most manuscripts
is actually Yasepheh – the word from which jasper derives;
scholars think that refers to green jasper (the rarest and most prized form in
early times) rather than red jasper (the most common form). Yahalom is
usually translated by the Septuagint as an "onyx", but sometimes as
"beryl" or as "jasper"; onyx only started being mined after
the Septuagint was written, so the Septuagint's term "onyx" probably
does not mean onyx – onyx is originally an Assyrian word meaning ring, and
so could refer to anything used for making rings. Yahalom is similar to
a Hebrew word meaning hit hard, so some people think that it means diamond. The
variation in possibilities of meaning for this sixth stone in the Hoshen is
reflected in different translations of the Bible – the King James Version
translates the sixth stone as diamond, the New International Version
translates it as emerald, and the Vulgate translates it as jaspis –
meaning jasper. There is a wide range of views among traditional sources about
which tribe the stone refers to.
New
Testament scriptures
Religious pendant showing Christ
blessing, framed with rubies and pearls, from the Byzantine empire, 12th or
13th century
In a Christian New Testament
parable, Jesus compared the Kingdom of Heaven to a "pearl of great
price" in Matthew 13: 45–46. "Again, the kingdom of heaven is like
unto a merchant man, seeking goodly (fine) pearls: Who, when he had found one
pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had, and bought it."
The twelve gates of the New Jerusalem
are reportedly each made of a single pearl in Revelation 21:21, that is, the
Pearly Gates. "And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every gate was of
one pearl: and the streets of the city were pure gold, as if transparent
glass."
Holy things are compared to pearls
in Matthew 7:6. "Do not give dogs what is holy, and do not throw your
pearls before pigs, lest they trample them underfoot and turn to attack
you."
Pearls are also found in numerous
references showing the wickedness and pride of a people, as in Revelation
18:16. "And saying, Alas, alas, that great city, that was clothed in fine
linen, in purple and scarlet, and decked with gold, and precious stones, and
pearls!"
Islamic
scriptures
The Qur'an often mentions that
dwellers of paradise will be adorned with pearls:
22:23 God will admit those who
believe and work righteous deeds, to Gardens beneath which rivers flow: they
shall be adorned therein with bracelets of gold and pearls; and their garments
there will be of silk.
35:33 Gardens of Eternity will they
enter: therein will they be adorned with bracelets of gold and pearls; and
their garments there will be of silk.
52:24 Round about them will serve,
[devoted] to them, youths [handsome] as pearls well-guarded.
Other
scriptures
The metaphor of a pearl appears in
the longer Hymn of the Pearl, a poem respected for its high literary quality,
and use of layered theological metaphor, found within one of the texts of
Gnosticism.
The Pearl of Great Price is a book
of scripture in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Source :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar