jshepherd
Pearl Paradise
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2004
- Messages
- 6,299
This is in response to the thread "Hong Kong-China's Pearl City".
https://www.pearl-guide.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1686
I thought it warrented a new thread as the topic I rambled into is quite heavy.
From what I understand, keshi pearls are quite acceptable in the Middle East as real pearls. We cannot refer to them as natural pearls here, and in fact CIBJO calls them keshi cultured pearls.
CIBJO on keshi pearls
Page 16 of the recently published ?Blue Book?.
5.102 Keshi Cultured Pearl
A trade name that designates a non-beaded cultured pearl formed accidentally or intentionally by human invitation in marine pearl oysters such as the Akoya oyster (Pinctada fucata), Silver/Gold lipped oyster (Pinctada maxima) and Black lipped oyster (Pinctada margaritifera) and is a byproduct of the culturing process. The creation results from the formation of a pearl sac? etc.
You have to watch out for that human ?invitation?
Now for my little rant about the new definitions which I believe CIBJO released TOO EARLY!
According to the above definition keshi pearls are indeed cultured pearls, but they can only be formed in marine mollusks. That, of course, goes against industry standard terminology. Is it a snub to the freshwater industry?? The biggest enemy of nearly every participant of the blue book?? They are defining keshi as a ?trade? term, yet ignoring ?trade? use of the term in freshwater keshi production. They cannot claim defense on original terminology, otherwise any keshi larger than the head of pin could not be called a keshi.
I submit that 5.95 (Hyriopsis schlegeli) of the same page 16 is incorrect. It is not a mistake of definition, it is a mistake of omission.
I also submit that 5.104 (La Paz Pearl Oyster) of (again) the same page 16 is incorrect. The mollusk is defined as: Pinctada mazatlanica, from the eastern Pacific Ocean, presently cultured in the Gulf of Mexico for blister and cultured pearls.
My question is this. When did the Gulf of Mexico jump Central America and become a part of the eastern Pacific Ocean? Are they confusing the Gulf of Mexico with the Gulf of California, by any chance? Clearly!
I believe the CIBJO book was released too early. If we went through all 60 pages of definitions and really scrutinized them, I wonder how many mistakes we would find. What is dangerous is that organizations, such as the GIA, are adopting the new terms as law. Did you know that the term ?nucleation? is not even in the book, or an allowable term any longer?
https://www.pearl-guide.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1686
I thought it warrented a new thread as the topic I rambled into is quite heavy.
From what I understand, keshi pearls are quite acceptable in the Middle East as real pearls. We cannot refer to them as natural pearls here, and in fact CIBJO calls them keshi cultured pearls.
CIBJO on keshi pearls
Page 16 of the recently published ?Blue Book?.
5.102 Keshi Cultured Pearl
A trade name that designates a non-beaded cultured pearl formed accidentally or intentionally by human invitation in marine pearl oysters such as the Akoya oyster (Pinctada fucata), Silver/Gold lipped oyster (Pinctada maxima) and Black lipped oyster (Pinctada margaritifera) and is a byproduct of the culturing process. The creation results from the formation of a pearl sac? etc.
You have to watch out for that human ?invitation?
Now for my little rant about the new definitions which I believe CIBJO released TOO EARLY!
According to the above definition keshi pearls are indeed cultured pearls, but they can only be formed in marine mollusks. That, of course, goes against industry standard terminology. Is it a snub to the freshwater industry?? The biggest enemy of nearly every participant of the blue book?? They are defining keshi as a ?trade? term, yet ignoring ?trade? use of the term in freshwater keshi production. They cannot claim defense on original terminology, otherwise any keshi larger than the head of pin could not be called a keshi.
I submit that 5.95 (Hyriopsis schlegeli) of the same page 16 is incorrect. It is not a mistake of definition, it is a mistake of omission.
I also submit that 5.104 (La Paz Pearl Oyster) of (again) the same page 16 is incorrect. The mollusk is defined as: Pinctada mazatlanica, from the eastern Pacific Ocean, presently cultured in the Gulf of Mexico for blister and cultured pearls.
My question is this. When did the Gulf of Mexico jump Central America and become a part of the eastern Pacific Ocean? Are they confusing the Gulf of Mexico with the Gulf of California, by any chance? Clearly!
I believe the CIBJO book was released too early. If we went through all 60 pages of definitions and really scrutinized them, I wonder how many mistakes we would find. What is dangerous is that organizations, such as the GIA, are adopting the new terms as law. Did you know that the term ?nucleation? is not even in the book, or an allowable term any longer?