The Romantic Meaning Of Jewels

“Well,” you may ask, “isn’t jewelry passionate by it’s very characteristics?” To some level this is true, although we wear jewels for every number of reasons that aren’t romantic… to look stylish, to appear proficient, to astonish our associates and neighbors. Hence what about the romance of jewelry? In this case I’m talking concerning romance in a broader sense than simply relationships. “A condition or feeling of mystery, anticipation, and remoteness from everyday life” Romantic jewelry is that jewelry that causes you feel special, dissimilar, like a princess or a prince. That jewels that takes you out of your usual hum beat life every time you put it on. I love silver and platinum and there are other metals (titanium comes to mind) that make wonderful jewelry, but there’s none like the romance of gold. To wear gold is to wear the jewelry of kings and queens. In archaic Egypt only the pharaohs and those especially privileged by the pharaohs were allowable to wear gold. Other jewelry that inspire feelings of romance are pearls, emeralds and rubies… and, of course, for several people, diamonds. By some means although diamonds don’t seem to have the same affection and romance as the other stones. Much of the romance that has been generated around diamonds is do to de Beers in the first part of the 20th century instituting a inspired and very valuable marketing campaign… so I’ll leave diamonds for another day. Conversely pearls… Pearls feel wonderful against your skin. To look intensely into a very well pearl is to look into eternity. Pearls have been respected in all time periods and all cultures. Historically baroque pearls (big unevenly shaped pearls) were used to make astonishing and excellent jewels by embellishing them with gold an gemstones. Often these took the shape of Neptune or other greek gods, sirens, gorgeous women and animals. The Canning Jewel in the Victoria and Albert museum is a famous and elaborate use of a baroque as the bottom for a fine-looking merman. Black pearls, particularly Tahitian black pearls have turned into really popular in current years. They come in a range of colors from fantastic purples and greens, through pinks to classy browns. All are beautiful and the choice of colors gives them a grand deal of flexibility in preferring just the correct pearl for your outfit and temper. The most beautiful black pearl necklace I have seen was from Morrison’s a tiny manufacturing jeweler in Berkeley. The pearls were set in a rainbow strung together so that every color melted into the 1 next to it — remarkable. (Parenthetically, if you wear pearls, do wear them against your skin, it’s good for them, but be sure that you do not wear any body mist, fragrance or ointment, as a minimum not where it may contact your pearls.) Emeralds and rubies are conventionally the emperor and empress of gems. Possibly it is their vivacious colors that inspired our associates. Definitely that vibrant blood red and cool serpent green are hard to ignore. Even today emeralds and rubies of equal size and quality are more high-priced than equal diamonds. In Victorian times colored gems were used to write out love mail. For instance a piece of jewelry may have these gems in order: LOVE: Lapis, Opal, Vermeil and Emerald. REGARD: Ruby, Emerald, Garnet, Amethyst, Ruby and Diamond. The form of jewelry also could harbor a romantic message. Hearts and clasped hands, hands holding a heart (Claddagh) and cupids are self descriptive, but some designs are a bit more delicate. For lots of cultures, plus the Romans and the Victorians, snakes were a symbol of permanent love. Prince Albert gave Queen Victoria a snake engagement ring — the beginning of a long and celebrated marriage. Amusingly lizards and frogs were (and perhaps still are) also signs of married pleasure. Maybe this clarifies the enduring attractiveness of jewelry depicting this wiggly creatures. Jewels in the form of flowers may also be figurative. To refer to Ophelia “There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance; pray, love, keep in mind: and there is pansies. Other flowers normally establish in jewels are daisies for innocence, roses for the growth and continuation of love and bouquets expressing the commingling and compatibility of marriage. When you are taking into account the wonderful present from that next anniversary, rather than the usual “anniversary ring” how about a more romantic bouquet pendant? So the next moment you are rooting thru your gem box before that particular assignation or in search of the perfect gift for the great lover, bear in mind the representative romance of jewels and gemstones.

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