Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Our December Birthstone: the Blue Zircon


The zircon is a famous gem of many colors, known for hundreds of years for its luster and fire. Zircon is found in many Asian countries, notably Sri Lanka as well as in Brazil, Australia, and East Africa. Colorless when pure, the zirconium silicate takes on various shades due to impurities. The brilliance and beauty of this gemstone makes it very popular and is reasonably priced in comparison with most other gems. The wide variety of colors of zircon, its rarity, and its relatively low cost make it a popular stone. It is often looked upon as an affordable diamond substitute, but is, in fact, a valuable gem in its own right.


Zircon comes closer to resembling diamond than any other natural gem. Its powerful luster and intense fire gives it splendor that no other natural gem but diamond can surpass. Colorless zircon can be distinguished from diamond by its strong double refraction and lower level of hardness. It must be treated with care, as it can crack or chip if banged too hard. For this reason, care must be also be taken when cutting zircon.

The blue variety of zircon is ofen known as Starlite. It is similar to aquamarine, topaz, indicolite tourmaline, and blue spinel.

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Rock N Gold is now on Facebook and we invite you to find our page and Like us there! You’ll get all our latest news, interesting links, special offers, and photos of our amazing custom-designed pieces. It’s a great way to stay in touch with us as well.


We invite you to recommend our Facebook page to your Facebook Friends who are also interested in fine jewelry or gold buying.

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What is the “Evil Eye”?


Many cultures have a superstitious belief that anything new, precious, or beautiful must be protected from the envy of others, otherwise it will be jinxed with the Evil Eye. They believe such a look can cause injury or bad luck for the person at whom it is directed, out of envy or dislike.

To ward off the Evil Eye, these cultures developed jewelry featuring a blue stone shaped to look like an eye. The jewelry can be elaborate or consist of just a glass bead or turquoise or lapis stone in a simple setting.

The Evil Eye is also known as “Mal de ojo.” Mediterranean cultures and many others around the world believe in the concept, and especially protect newborn babies by pinning blue stones to their clothes. In many Latin American countries, parents will tie a red ribbon around the child’s wrist or ankle. In the Middle East the blue stone is often combined with the image of a hand, known as the Hand of Fatima, or khamsa.

Victoria's Secrets: The History of Jewelry, Part 2

Mesopotamia
By about 4,000 years ago, jewelry making had become a significant craft in the Mesopotamian cities of Sumer and Akkad, in what is now Iraq. The Royal Cemetery of Ur, where hundreds of burials dating 2900–2300 BC were unearthed, produced evidence from tombs containing many artifacts in gold, silver, and semi-precious stones, such as lapis lazuli crowns embellished with gold figurines, close-fitting collar necklaces, and jewel-headed pins. In Assyria, men and women both wore lots of jewelry, including amulets, ankle bracelets, heavy multi-strand necklaces, and cylinder seals.

Jewelry in Mesopotamia tended to be manufactured from thin metal leaf and was set with brightly colored stones (chiefly agate, lapis, carnelian, and jasper). You can see many different shapes including leaves, spirals, cones, and bunches of grapes. Jewelers made pieces for people and also to decorate statues and idols. They developed a wide variety of sophisticated metalworking techniques, such as cloisonné, engraving, fine granulation, and filigree.

Mesopotamians kept extensive and detailed records about the trade and manufacture of jewelry, which have also been unearthed at various archaeological sites. One record in the Mari royal archives, for example, gives the composition of various items of jewelry:
1 necklace of flat speckled chalcedony beads including: 34 flat speckled chalcedony bead, [and] 35 gold fluted beads, in groups of five.

Greece
The Greeks started using gold and gems in jewelry in 1600 BC, although beads shaped as shells and animals were produced widely in earlier times. By 300 BC, the Greeks had mastered making colored jewelry and using amethysts, pearl, and emeralds. Also, the Greeks were the first to create cameos, using Indian Sardonyx, a striped brown pink and cream agate stone. Greek jewelry was often less elaborate than in other cultures, with simple designs and workmanship. However, as time progressed their designs grew in complexity and different materials soon emerged.

Jewelry in Ancient Greece was mostly worn for public appearances or on special occasions. It was frequently given as a gift and was mostly worn by women to show off their wealth, social status, and beauty. Some jewelry was believed to give the wearer protection from the “Evil Eye,” or give the owner supernatural powers, while other pieces had a religious symbolism. Older pieces of jewelry were dedicated to the Gods. The largest production of jewelry in these times came from Northern Greece and Macedonia.

The Greeks created jewelry using two different methods: lost-wax casting and hammered sheet metal. Casting had been practiced since the late Bronze Age; however, in Greece, fewer pieces of cast jewelry have been recovered. The more common form of Greek jewelry was the hammered sheet type. Sheets of metal were hammered to thickness and then soldered together. The inside of the two sheets were filled with wax or another liquid to preserve the metal work. Different techniques, such as using a stamp or engraving, were used to create motifs on the jewelry. Jewels could then be added to hollows or glass poured into special cavities on the surface.

The Greeks took much of their designs from the outlaying areas of their empire, such as parts of Asia conquered by Alexander the Great. In their earlier designs, other European influences can also be detected. When Roman rule came to Greece, their influence began to be felt in jewelry design. By 27 BC, Greek designs were heavily influenced by the Roman culture. That is not to say that indigenous design did not thrive; for example, numerous multicolored butterfly pendants on silver foxtail chains, dating from the 1st century, have been found near Olbia, with only one example ever found anywhere else.

Rome
Although jewelry work was abundantly diverse in earlier times, especially among the barbarian tribes such as the Celts, when the Romans conquered most of Europe, jewelry changed as Roman designs developed. The most common artifact of early Rome was the brooch, which was used to secure clothing together. The Romans used a diverse range of materials for their jewelry from their extensive resources across the continent. They used gold and sometimes bronze or bone, and in earlier times, glass beads, and pearls. As early as 2,000 years ago, they imported Sri Lankan sapphires and Indian diamonds and used emeralds and amber in their jewelry.

In Roman-ruled England, fossilized wood from Northern England, called jet, was often carved into pieces of jewelry. The early Italians worked in crude gold and created clasps, necklaces, earrings and bracelets. They also produced larger pendants that could be filled with perfume.

Like the Greeks, Romans often used jewelry to ward off the “Evil Eye,” given by other people. Although women wore a vast array of jewelry, men often only wore a finger ring. Although they were expected to wear at least one ring, some Roman men wore a ring on every finger, while others wore none. Roman men and women wore rings with engraved gems, used with wax to seal documents, a practice that continued into medieval times when kings and noblemen did the same. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Roman jewelry designs were absorbed by neighboring countries and tribes.

Next month: The Middl Ages and the Renaissance

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

November’s Birthstone: The Fabulous Topaz


November’s birthstone is the fabulous topaz, a word that comes from Sanskrit and means “fire.” Citrines, which look similar to yellow topaz and possess similar qualities, are often also considered November’s birthstone.

The topaz is a clear, hard mineral stone found in Brazil, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and Russia. It occurs in a wide range of colors including red, orange, peach, pink, gold, yellow, brown, and clear (sometimes confused with diamonds). The more intense the color, the more valuable the stone. Naturally pale to medium blue topaz can also be enhanced by irradiation to produce a more intense blue color. Although topaz is a very hard gemstone, it can be split with a single blow and should be protected from hard knocks.

During the Middle Ages, topaz was thought to heal both physical and mental disorders and prevent death. The Greeks believed it had power to increase strength and to make its wearer invisible, while the Romans believed it had power to improve eyesight. The Egyptians wore it as an amulet to protect them from injury.

In medieval times, it was also believed that topaz would bring wisdom to its bearer, which explains why it was so common to give topaz jewels to heads of state, ambassadors and other officials. It is sometimes called "Imperial Topaz" because red and pink topaz gems were used in the jewelry of the 18th and 19th century Russian Czarinas. The most famous topaz was originally thought to be a diamond: a 1,680-carat colorless topaz known as the "Braganza Diamond," set in the Portuguese crown jewels. 

The ring in Hans Holbein’s famous portrait of King Henry VIII is definitely a topaz, since no other stone with these colors would have been worthy enough for a king at that time. Today the topaz is worthy of becoming a treasured gift for your loved ones with November birthdays, or at any time of the year. Ask us about some of our beautiful creations featuring topaz or citrine today!

Victoria's Secrets: The History of Jewelry, Part 1


The history of jewelry goes back almost as far as the history of humanity itself. The first signs that have been found of people wearing jewelry come from Africa, where beads with holes have been found that date back 75,000 years in a cave in South Africa. In Kenya, beads made from ostrich eggshells have been date to more than 40,000 years ago.


Outside Africa, the Cro-Magnon peoples made crude necklaces and bracelets of bone, teeth, berries, and stone, which they strung on pieces of string or animal sinew. They also made buttons out of carved bone. Some jewelry included pieces of shells or mother-of-pearl. Carved bracelets made of mammoth tusks have been found in southern Russia. We first find indication of using metal in jewelry around 7,000 years ago, with copper.

In addition to the other giant leaps human civilization made in ancient Egypt, 3,000 to 5,000 years ago, jewelry design and manufacture first became a big part of human art and decor. The Egyptians preferred the luxury, rarity, and workability of gold over all other metals. The domain of the wealthy, jewelry began to symbolize political and religious power in the community. Ancient Egyptians also included jewelry in burial rituals, dressing corpses in their gold finery for the afterlife.


Egyptian jewelry was predominantly manufactured in large workshops attached to temples or palaces. The ancient Egyptians were big fans of bright colors, and so often used colored glass in conjunction with gold, in place of the natural colors of precious gems. There was a more brightly colored glass formation that mimicked nearly each gemstone. The different colors meant different things: for example, the Book of the Dead dictated that the necklace of Isis around a mummy’s neck must be red to satisfy the goddess Isis’s need for blood, while green jewelry symbolized new growth for crops and fertility. Although lapis lazuli and silver, which were also popular, had to be imported from outside Egypt, most other materials were found in or near Egypt. For example, Egyptians mined the queen Cleopatra's favorite gem, the emerald, in the Red Sea.

Egyptian jewelry designs began to spread around the region, and can also found in ancient Phoenician jewelry. As the manufacture and wearing of jewelry became more widespread, it was common to trade between the Middle East and Europe, as suggested by ancient Turkish designs found in Persian jewelry. Women began to wear elaborate gold and silver pieces that were used in ceremonies. This would soon usher in an era of elaborate and extravagant personal adornment. 

Simon Says...


Rock N Gold Creations has been in business for 18 years and we’re still rocking, with our new logo and website along with Facebook and Twitter accounts which will allow you to get all kinds of insights into what we’re doing and the jewelry industry, and to share us with your friends and family. Recommending our sites to your friends is the best way to show them why you voted us “Best of San Diego” for the fourth year in a row, and to take care of any of their jewelry needs.

I’ve been in the industry for more than 21 years, and even with the still-uncertain economy, the holiday season is around the corner and this is the time of year when we all really need to think of our family, friends, and what life is all about. It’s a time to be together and show each other that we are placed on this earth to live life to its fullest and learn what our true values are. By giving the gift of a unique designed piece of fine jewelry, you will show your special person the meaning of life and bring them special enjoyment of the season. We have created many special pieces of fine jewelry for our clients that have been treasured for a lifetime.

Best regards,
Simon Mattar