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Ever since Prince William proposed to Kate Middleton on November 16 with his late mother Diana’s sapphire and diamond engagement ring, replicas of the bauble have been selling faster than they can be made. Same was true 30 years ago with the original ring. Replica royal rings inspired by the solitaire sapphire surrounded by diamonds have been selling out everywhere and at every price — from high-end diamond manufacturers for thousands of dollars to channels such as QVC for only $29.
Au-Co Mai, president of Emitations.com, a company that specializes in trendy fashion jewelry, said that she already carried a Diana-inspired ring and when Prince William announced his engagement, sales skyrocketed. “Traffic on the site doubled that day and the ring was sold out. We had orders coming in from over 50 countries — people are shipping them to friends all over the world. Everyone wants one.”
But it was not that long ago that some jewelers in the U.S. were scrambling to replicate a pink diamond ring from loosely defined Hollywood royalty. Jamie Lossie, a buyer for Atlanta-based Solomon Brothers jewelers, recalled that when Ben Affleck proposed to Jennifer Lopez back in 2002 with a Harry Winston pink diamond, interest in rare gemstones spiked across the board. “[Celebrity engagements] definitely brings awareness, to both the designer and to pink diamonds. Even if someone comes in and does not actually buy a replica of the ring, they will ask questions about it. It gives retailers an opportunity to educate customers as well.”
But let’s face it — the opportunity presented from high profile engagements don’t happen every day.
What exactly does flash in the mind of consumers following celeb-inspired jewelry headlines, whether it be Jessica Simpson’s unique ruby engagement ring or Beyonce’s 5-carat rock?
Dr. Erik Gregory, a psychoanalyst and executive director of the Media Psychology Research Center in Boston, explained: “Throughout history, people have emulated what celebs have done. It’s called para-social interaction. When we copy them — and Oprah is a good example — we feel like they have some special insight, or greater taste or opportunity than we have and we feel like we are connecting.”
Gregory said that especially in today’s celebrity-oriented culture, it’s so important to feel this bond with Hollywood or Buckingham Palace. “If you buy a ring that Kate Middleton has, you feel in some psychological sense that you are connected to her, even if there really isn’t any psychological connection. Why do we put celeb names on clothing? If we wear Jessica Simpson’s line, we feel like we are taking on a sense of importance.”
The answer might be programed. Dr. Stuart Fischoff, senior editor of the Journal of Media Psychology and emeritus professor of media psychology at California State University at Los Angeles, cites the reason in our biology. “It’s built in our DNA to be attracted to alpha male and females. Celebrities and royalty are our cultural alphas. It also feeds the fantasy of romance and it’s just the escape from reality that Americans seek so much. It’s why Walt Disney was so successful.”
It is not only U.S. consumers who are clamouring for Kate Middleton’s engagement ring — or blue dress. Experts say this phenomenon to buy copies is certainly widespread and not just limited to any culture or income level.
“My guess is that people up and down the affluence scale are buying the ring, since affluent shoppers buy both faux/costume jewelry as well as real. The Diana engagement ring is a classic and with repros priced from $1,000 to $39-or so at QVC, people have their pick of quality levels. A beautiful ring is a beautiful ring, faux or real,” said Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing.
Mai, whose company carried a wide inventory of celeb-inspired jewelry, said that sales for blue sapphires will definitely be on the rise leading up to the royal wedding in April, and its all due to an inner need to make an emotional investment.
“People already know that this is an aspirational business, you want to create a product that you want people to engage in emotionally. I choose to do this because I think it’s fascinating,” Mai said.
Dr. Gregory concluded that our celeb-obsessed culture is not a cause for concern though. “Human beings are social creatures, we are always looking for cues in our surroundings as to what other people are doing.
“When you try to become something you are not, that’s when it becomes a bad thing, but if you are doing it to boost some happiness, then it’s perfectly healthy,” he said.
Elizabeth Taylor’s jewelry collection, valued at more than $150 million, could be auctioned by Christie’s sometime in the future, People magazine reported. Taylor passed away this past week at the age of 79. Christie’s declined comment for the story.
The collection is said to be unique given Taylor’s love for and knowledge of jewelry and the provenance she adds to them.
“She had the most amazing eye,” Peter Sedghi, chief executive officer of Luxury Jewels of Beverly Hills, told People. “To be honest, she knew more than I did [about jewelry]. When you would show her stones, she would tell you the origin, if it’s good quality, bad quality, and where it came from.”
Sedghi worked with the star on her House of Taylor jewelry line. Diamond jewelry in Taylor’s collection include a ruby and diamond Cartier necklace from Mike Todd, the 33.19-carat Krupp diamond from her fifth husband, Richard Burton, which was mounted as a ring, and a crystal and diamond lily of the valley brooch from Rex Harrison. Taylor also owned the famous 69.42-carat, pear-shaped Burton Taylor diamond, given to her in 1969.
“She had a collection like I’ve never seen before, and she knew exactly what everyone was — what the diamonds were, the quality. But it was more for her; it was…the history behind it. A lot of them had sentimental value,” Sedghi noted.
American-mined gemstones — and their interesting backstories — give jewelers unique ways to distinguish themselves and offer a profitable market niche for those willing to learn about the gems and take stock in them. Many consumers are unaware that a broad range of gemstones is produced in our country. Among the most important are agate, coral, feldspar, garnet, jasper, opal, pearl, peridot, quartz, sapphire, shell, tourmaline and turquoise.
There are interesting stories behind American gems. American freshwater pearl cultivation on the Tennessee River is one example. The late John Latendresse, who founded the American Pearl Co. in 1961, devoted 20 years to developing new techniques for cultivating domestic mollusks. The first marketable pearls were harvested in 1983, but it was not until 1985 that the company succeeded in cultivating freshwater pearls on a large scale.
Despite the recession, the United States continues to dominate global gem consumption. The domestic market for natural, nondiamond gemstones was about $946 million in 2010, an increase of 21 percent over 2009 — reflecting improvements in the overall economy and the resulting impact on luxury spending, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summaries released in January 2011. The estimated U.S. production value of natural gems, including freshwater shell, was $8.5 million in 2010, up slightly from 2009, but about 25 percent less than the banner year of 2007.
Arizona is a leading producer of gem-quality peridot and turquoise. Also found in the state are amethyst, agate and jasper, and small amounts of fiery red pyrope, which is known as “anthill” garnet because ants retrieve smaller crystals from below ground and deposit them in their building of desert ant hills.
Oregon produces some of the best gem-quality feldspar in the world and red labradorite, also known as sunstone, one of the most popular gems of the state. Oregon also produces a variety of agates, jaspers and obsidians. California is best known for its tourmaline, particularly in shades of green and pink.
In Montana, sapphire is the top gem. Its Yogo Gulch sapphires have been renowned for their natural beauty for more than a century. Quartz is the most important gem in Arkansas, most notably rock crystal, which is sold under the trade name of
“Hot Springs Diamond.” The state also produces smoky quartz — often heat-treated rock crystal — along with agate, jasper and opal.
A variety of gems are found in Idaho, including agate, jasper, quartz, almandite garnet, and opal, which is either yellow or blue facet-grade or fire opal. Tennessee is known for its lustrous, organically shaped river pearls and shell sold as seed material to the cultured pearl industry.
Bill Heher of Rare Earth Mining Co. ,Trumbull, Connecticut, says he broke into the gem trade in 1976 when excitement over American gems was just starting to grow. What got him hooked was what he considers to be one of the most American of all gems, picture jasper. “Looking at slabs and cut stones of picture jasper is a painter’s experience,” he says in describing a gemstone that is still popular with consumers.
In his 30-plus years in the business, Heher says the American gem market has matured, solidly competing against at least 100 other nations that export rough and cut stones, as well as finished gem-set products. He notes expansions in American production of material like agate, sunstone, chrysocolla, tourmaline, hematite, lapis, opal, red beryl, jade, azurite and opalized fluorite, Herkimer diamond from New York and coral from the southern states.
“The list is huge and still growing, albeit not as exponentially as those earlier days,” Heher says, adding that a friend recently told him about a new jade from Alaska. In fact, the U.S. Bureau of Mines reports that at least 60 different types of gemstones have been unearthed in the United States.
In addition to various agate, jasper and quartz, the line includes such unique gems as bertrandite — lavender-to-purple opalized fluorite from Utah; rhodonite — a rose-to-red silicate mineral from Colorado; and variscite — a green-to-light-blue mineral from the phosphate group that looks similar to turquoise and is found in Utah. All of the gemstones in the collection are natural and untreated. Braunwart says his Vancouver, Washington–based company cuts stones for the majority of American miners.
Braunwart supports the GemAmerica brand name for manufacturers and retailers with training and point-of-purchase materials. He says that jewelers who commit to the line continue to restock it. He cites a July 2010 Adweek Media/Harris Poll that indicates 61 percent of Americans surveyed say they’re more likely to purchase something promoted as “Made in America.” But the same poll also suggests that the majority of Americans who are not prompted to buy products made in their homeland are neither more nor less likely to buy them. So, the only way to capitalize on the “Buy American” theme is to market it!
After five and a half months one of the most interesting exhibitions held in the Harry Oppenheimer Diamond Museum has come to a close. It was the “And Thou Shalt Breathe Life into A Gem” (Curators Yehuda Kassif – Israel, Gaby Pauly – Germany), an exhibition that brought some of the finest gemstone carvings made in Idar Oberstein to the Israeli public.
The Harry Oppenheimer Diamond Museum in Ramat Gan had approached the Stiftung Deutsches Edelsteinmuseum in Idar Oberstein asking them to lend rare and special exhibits in order to organize a special exhibition of carvings, artifacts and jewelry that was produced by cutters there.
Preparations took about a year and half to launch the exhibition. It also took the enthusiasm and love of the Pauly family in Idar Oberstein and the crucial assistance of Dieter Hahn and Manfred Wild, but mainly it was the talent and craftsmanship of almost thirty carvers who agreed to send their artful work to Israel.
The exhibition was inaugurated on September 7th, 2010 in the presence of Israeli Minister of Trade, Industry and Labor, honorary guests from the German Embassy in Tel Aviv and leading figures of the diamond and gemstone industry and trade in Israel.
During the exhibition about 13,571 visitors visited the museum. (46% more than the parallel period a year before.) Over 75 groups made a specially reserved visit to the museum and about 60 lectures (two hours each) were given about the art of carving, the history of carving and cultural relations.

GENEVA.- David Bennett, Sotheby’s Chairman of Jewellery for Europe and the Middle East, announced that Sotheby’s will sell the most valuable emerald and diamond Tiara to have appeared at auction in over 30 years in its sale of Magnificent and Noble Jewels in Geneva on the 17th May 2011. Estimated to sell for £3.1-6.2 million (CHF 4.5- 9 million / $5-10 million), the Highly Important and Extremely Rare Emerald and Diamond Tiara is composed of 11 exceptionally rare Colombian emerald pear-shaped drops which weigh over 500 carats in total, which may well have originally adorned the neck of a Maharajah. These emeralds are also believed to have been in the personal collection of Empress Eugénie.
This superb tiara, very much in the style of Amore & Baci, was commissioned, possibly from the renowned jewelers Chaumet, by Guido Count von Henckel, First Prince von Donnersmarck for his second wife Princess Katharina (1862-1929). The jewellery collection of the Donnersmarcks was known to be on a par with, or even to have exceeded, those of many of the crowned heads of Europe.
Bejewelled, superbly crafted, each with its own intriguing story, and full of surprises, the first in a series of Couture Egg Pendants herald Springtime in the new Saisons Russes High Jewellery Collection from Fabergé, the jewellery and objects house that embraces creativity, craftsmanship and heritage. The egg pendants, the first to bear the authentic Fabergé name since 1917, represent rebirth, new life that bursts forth in spring, welcomed and celebrated after the long, harsh Russian winter.
Paying homage to the legendary Imperial Eggs created by Peter Carl Fabergé for the Romanov family, and celebrating the Egg as a timeless universal symbol of life, Fabergé has designed a collection of one-of-a-kind High Jewellery Egg Pendants, Les Fameux de Fabergé, each illustrating a traditional Russian proverb, through complex, multi-layered concepts brought to life by the finest craftsmanship in the world today. The first of these creations, launched in Paris, during Couture Week, July 2011, mark the beginning of a series of twelve High Jewellery Egg Pendants, one for every month of the year. Each egg pendant, a wearable object of desire, involves a lengthy, exacting and in many cases pioneering fabrication process, pushing boundaries of both design and manufacture, and taking contemporary craftsmanship to a new level of sophistication.
True to its legacy, to the genius of Peter Carl Fabergé, the egg pendants fuse contemporary dynamism with age-old tradition, refined opulence with fable and folklore, superlative hand-craftsmanship and, in one instance, dazzling high-technology. The themes delve into the World of Fabergé, inspiration for all contemporary Fabergé collections. They include:
The Diaghilev Egg, “Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it”, diamond circles shimmering with rubies, with an invisibly-set diamond drawer that opens at the push of a gemstone, to reveal a matching pendant. The Ribbon Egg, “A gift is better than a promise”, an elaborate gem-embroidered layered, articulated ribbon, based on traditional Russian prints and textiles, set at the top with a large diamond and ornamented with enamel, lacquer and precious stones, a kaleidoscope of colour and texture. The Cherry Egg, “Life is a bowl of cherries”, clustered with luscious cherries, in carved stones, gold and gems, with a hidden golden nut and then a golden pit inside. The Train des Fleurs Egg, “He that travels knows much,” recalling the train that brought flowers from Grasse, in the South of France, to St Petersburg, during the winter party season, ensuring the palace halls were filled with spring flowers and fragrance. The Chimère Egg, “What you see is not always what you get,” a puzzle egg, in the spirit of Russian fairy tales, with rotating segments, a fish, flower and frog, creating child-like fantasy creatures. The High Tech Egg, “Every man is the architect of his own fortune,” an intricate three-dimensional structure, playing with space, height, depth and colour to create a modernist framework. The Mosaic Egg, “Old love does not rust,” inspired by the eponymous Fabergé Imperial Egg and its interpretation of petit point embroidery, with delicate diamond lattice work at the both ends. The Diamond Egg, “Genius is simplicity,” a titanium egg, entirely invisibly-set with white diamonds, a feat never before achieved, delivering a frisson of delight at its weightlessness and brilliance. The Snake Egg, “Where there is love, there is no darkness”, the serpent curled around a glossy enamelled egg, re-interpreting a favourite Fabergé emblem, symbol of eternity and rebirth.
Fabergé will also offer a bespoke service for Les Fameux de Fabergé, for the creation of special, personal commissions of High Jewellery Egg Pendants.
This exuberant collection of small, exquisitely-formed Fine Jewellery Egg Pendants recreates the abundance, joy and diversity of Peter Carl Fabergé’s original egg pendants.
With a repertoire of over 60 different designs, reinterpreting iconic Fabergé themes and resonating with echoes of Fabergé’s famous skills and artistry, the eggs offer a dazzling choice of materials, techniques and styles: carved hardstones and minerals, as varied as rock crystal, chrysoprase, snowflake obsidian, lavender jade, jadeite, pink opal, rutilated quartz, jasper and turquoise, conjuring up the rich mineral resources of the Ural Mountains, with their fables and legends; quilted gold, brushed gold, engraved gold, coloured gold in recherché red, pink, green, yellow and white, inspired by original Fabergé cigarette cases: oxidised silver; gem-glinting rococo openwork; enamels and lacquer, exquisitely degradé, inspired by traditional Russian lacquer-work, and lavished with Rococo gold-work: and immaculately pavé-set gems capturing the exotic, vibrant hues and striking graphic prints of the Ballets Russes.
A cluster of opulent and striking Zénaïde egg lockets is inspired by traditional Uzbek textiles, their intricate geometric patterns set with precious gems, a capsule collection poised between High and Fine Jewellery.
Each group of small fine jewellery egg pendants has its own story to tell, from the 18th century Rococo style favoured by Peter Carl Fabergé, through the tales of the minerals and magical stone flowers of the fabled Mistress of Copper Mountain, to the many gifts and presents that were an essential part of life at the Imperial Court. The individual collections include Oeuf Cadeau, Oeuf Matelassé Empereur, in quilted gold, Oeuf Impératrice and Oeuf Impératrice Emeraude, with its lush emerald tassel, the Oeuf Rosa Cloisonné, with cloisonné enamelled roses, Oeuf Rococo, Oeuf Barocco, Oeuf Sophia, Oeuf Nina, Oeuf Spirale, with dancing spiralling lines of gems, and Oeuf Pur, in simple, silky enamels.
The mystical Red Gemstone that has mesmerized Royals & Gods alike. The precious gemstone said to be the Gem worthy of Kings. Ruby is a gem variety of Corundum, Red in color, magnificent in attraction. The fire of Ruby is its biggest unique characteristic. With a hardness of 9 Mohr, it is one of the most durable gems, and needless to say, the Rarest of All. A perfect and a pure Ruby without any impurities are deemed priceless. No wonder, Ruby is titled as the King of Gems.
The richness of a red Ruby makes Ruby a unique stone among the gemstone. The stories behind this precious stone cover Ruby with unveil myth.
A ruby is a pink to blood-red colored gemstone, a variety of the mineral corundum (aluminium oxide). The red color is caused mainly by the presence of the element chromium. Its name comes from ruber, Latin for red. Other varieties of gem-quality corundum are called sapphires. The ruby is considered one of the four precious stones, together with the sapphire, the emerald, and the diamond.
Prices of rubies are primarily determined by color. The brightest and most valuable “red” called pigeon blood-red, commands a huge premium over other rubies of similar quality. After color follows clarity: similar to diamonds, a clear stone will command a premium, but a ruby without any needle-like rutile inclusions may indicate that the stone has been treated. Cut and carat (weight) also determine the price.
Special Feature:
When danger is imminent, it is indicated to its owner by a premium flawless ruby while turning its color to dark.
Therapeutical Uses:
Ruby aids in the treatment of heart diseases, low or high blood pressure, detoxication of the body, brain haemorrhages, eye inflammation, typhoid, epilepsy, bile complaints, sunstroke, lethargy and nightmares.
Compatibility:
Ruby can be worn by the ascendant or moon sign of Aries, Leo, Capricorn and Scorpio. It can also be worn by the person born in the asterisms of sun (i.e., kruttika, uttara phalguni & uttarashada). Ruby is a birthstone for July and the persons with the birth dates 1, 10, 19 & 28 can also wear this hot gem.
Caution: Ruby should not be worn with diamond, blue sapphire, emerald or gomedh
The lordship of Gem Ruby is held by planet Sun that represents eyes in our body.
Pooja procedure for wearing ruby:
Pooja should be performed in the hora of sun or mars on any Sunday between 5.30 am to 6.30 am or 12.00 noon to 1.00 p.m.
Materials for pooja – Red silk or cotton cloth, wheat, yellow flowers and incense.
Procedure:
Spread the silk cloth before god and put wheat on it. First wash the stone embedded ring milk followed by water. Then apply paste of sandal, vermillion (kumkum) on it and place it on the red cloth. Light the lamps and burn incenses perform the pooja to the ring with yellow flowers reciting surya mantra.
SURYA MANTRA
“Ashwa dhwajaaya vidmahe, Paasha hasthaaya dheemahi
Thanno surya prachodayaath” || 108 times ||
Offer some fruits and sweets, and then wear the ring. Additionally the wearer can donate the jaggery to get maximum benefit.
A gemstone or gem (also called a precious or semi-precious stone, or jewel) is a piece of mineral, which, in cut and polished form, is used to make jewellery or other adornments. However certain rocks, (such as lapis lazuli) and organic materials (such as amber or jet) are not minerals, but are still used for jewellery, and are therefore often considered to be gemstones as well. Most gemstones are hard, but some soft minerals are used in jewellery because of their lustre or other physical properties that have aesthetic value. Rarity is another characteristic that lends value to a gemstone. Aside from the diamond, the ruby, sapphire, emerald, pearl (strictly speaking not a gemstone) and opal have also been considered to be precious. Up to the discoveries of bulk amethyst in Brazil in the 19th century, amethyst was considered a precious stone as well, going back to ancient Greece. Even in the last century certain stones such as aquamarine, peridot and cat’s eye have been popular and hence been regarded as precious.
Many gemstones are used in even the most expensive jewellery, depending on the brand name of the designer, fashion trends, market supply, treatments, etc. Nevertheless, diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds still have a reputation that exceeds those of other gemstones.
Rare or unusual gemstones, generally meant to include those gemstones which occur so infrequently in gem quality that they are scarcely known except to connoisseurs, include andalusite, axinite,cassiterite, clinohumite and beryl. These pieces of stones also serve as an emblem of the world’s spirit and its inner soul. The heartbeat of the earth can be heard even in the shortest pebble, but all you need is watchful eyes and ears that can really hear in the silence.
What they have in them, and what they can do for you, you can feel that all just holding them in your hands. We know instinctively that they will not chip and they will not break. Their inner beauty and grace always attract you and ask you to put them in your hands. You can’t resist and want to feel their true feel.
Hot Massage is a very special kind of massage that uses smooth heated stones by immersing them in hot water.. The heat of the stone penetrates the body and warms and relaxes soar and tight muscles it is a very soothing and comforting experience. Usually Basalt stones are used but lately the people as hot massage stone has become quite popular as the extra ordinary healing power of the stone now know the use of lapis lazuli.. It is ideal for hot massage therapy; it is non-porous due to which it is hygienic and easy to clean during therapy. Being hot stone in itself, it imparts the right amount of heat that is absorbed in the body’s energy flow points thus enhancing the flow of energy also it dissolves the tension and heals the aches. Apart from lapis lazuli luxury tiles some other gemstones like moonstone and Turquoise have also been found quite effective to boost friendship and promote good relations. These days the stones like them are a major hit in the world of fashion and even some celebrities have been seen with these stones to bring harmony and strength in their friendships. Besides friendship, these precious gems also considers quite effective to bring prosperity and good luck in the life of the wearer.
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