soberguy
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2009
- Messages
- 650
MakingTheGrade|1358371368|3357168 said:Oh. I've also heard that jade is sensitive to being overly dry. Maybe the color change with wear is related to oil or sweat over a long period?
minousbijoux|1358371810|3357173 said:I heart, heart, heart ArtNouveau's ring. Stunning. As for the bangles, I love the ones that are not one consistent color, like the white ones with the bright green, like evergreens growing in the snow...
Chrono|1358428785|3357682 said:minousbijoux|1358371810|3357173 said:I heart, heart, heart ArtNouveau's ring. Stunning. As for the bangles, I love the ones that are not one consistent color, like the white ones with the bright green, like evergreens growing in the snow...
This is aptly called "moss in snow".
Chrono » 17 Jan 2013 07:19
Written by minousbijoux » 16 Jan 2013 15:30:
I heart, heart, heart ArtNouveau's ring. Stunning. As for the bangles, I love the ones that are not one consistent color, like the white ones with the bright green, like evergreens growing in the snow...
This is aptly called "moss in snow".
corundum_conundrum|1358539986|3358957 said:Chrono » 17 Jan 2013 07:19
Written by minousbijoux » 16 Jan 2013 15:30:
I heart, heart, heart ArtNouveau's ring. Stunning. As for the bangles, I love the ones that are not one consistent color, like the white ones with the bright green, like evergreens growing in the snow...
This is aptly called "moss in snow".
Much more elegant than "mutton fat" as I've been instructed to call whitish jade...
Between "mutton fat" and "pigeon's blood" the colored gemstone world has found some creative ways to describe beautiful things in the most macabre of terms.
pandabee|1358135009|3355030 said:I don't have any advice for buying online...in my limited jade buying experience, I learned that the most important thing was 1) whether the jade was treated (filled with glass or dyed). It should ring like a bell if you strike it against another stone. and 2) whether you like how it looks or not. The other thing about it is that once you start to wear it, the colors seem to intensify and become more translucent as it adapts to the wearer. Chinese tradition says that jade is alive, and if it is filled with artificial enhancements it won't have the same glowing effect, and it will also lose its "protective" effects (another topic altogether).
I saw a lot of the Burmese jade and I believe that was the more intense green. I ended up buying a white jade bangle. It's also known as "mutton jade" but it's actually never white when I wear it. It varies between a pale mossy green and a glowy light green (to the point where I had a coworker ask if I was wearing a glow-in-the-dark bracelet ).
I really wanted a translucent light green bangle but couldn't find one my size or in my price range. Also because if you buy bangles that are already translucent, those are going to be the most expensive. Most will become more clear as they are worn but it is hard to see that potential "off the rack" so to speak.
dett|1374562894|3488320 said:I just started to wear my new jade bangle and notice a change to milky or cloudy after a week.
part gypsy|1377546475|3510083 said:My mother has a jade ring , bezel setting in yellow gold. I'm think it was a hand me down because it only fit her pinky. My sister and I were kind of obsessed with it because it almost seemed to glow. I asked my Mom about it and she says she hasn't seen it lately. Definitely would pay to have sized it up to wear it. Now I feel like asking my Mom about it again.
For those pieces, how much of the value is in the stone, and how much is in the quality of the carving/historical provenance?