Colour Through the Eyes of Everyone

New Zealand Natural Pearl

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May 4, 2008
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Our Natural Abalone Rainbow of Colour. Rainbow of colour.jpg
A New thread opened up to discuss colour and origin of colour
 
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This is wonderful! Is it in the idea stage or is there something holding it all together? I can't tell.
barbie
 
Ditto Perlas, but several closeups.

That is a wonderful layout. So today, but now that it has been invented, I don't think it will ever go out of style! You guys are geniouses of design!!
 
I'm in Lust and Awe-----

Pattye
so many pearls, so little time
 
Oh my goodness- that is the prettiest, most unique necklace I have seen in a long, long time! I love the way the colors graduate from red to blue and purple. Are you going to prong set each pearl individually?

How much is it?? I would save money forever to buy it! Do you accept layoff?? Lol- $20 a month for the next 10 years hahaha! ;)

I am printing the image out and hanging it on my wall- that is truly a treasure to work for!
 
$20 a month for the next 10 years hahaha! ;)

I am printing the image out and hanging it on my wall- that is truly a treasure to work for!
Offhand, I'd say more like 10 years' hard labor!

Also downloaded the photo in order to brighten it a bit. Look forward to further insight regarding paua color.
 
Oh my goodness- that is the prettiest, most unique necklace I have seen in a long, long time! I love the way the colors graduate from red to blue and purple. Are you going to prong set each pearl individually?

How much is it?? I would save money forever to buy it! Do you accept layoff?? Lol- $20 a month for the next 10 years hahaha! ;)

I am printing the image out and hanging it on my wall- that is truly a treasure to work for!


Can I skip the layoff and go straight to lay-away? I'm switching to your monitor! I'm getting lovely blues graduating to deep green, olive, peridots. Gorgeous still. Glad someone is asking how it will be set. Is it rigid or floating?
 
This is gorgeous - the colour doesnt do it justice. Photo taken in bad wintery
light. I have only laid the pearls for a mock up - still trying to figure out how
we will attach. The variety of colour is amazing. Glad you like.
 
I have only laid the pearls for a mock up - still trying to figure out how we will attach.

They could be set as a mesh necklace - either in prongs or pegs, to look just as they do now... Not the simplest idea, but nothing too eccentric either. :rolleyes:

The result looks like this:

f3_3.jpg


a mesh bracelet with peg set keshi from TriGem.

You's need to buy your henchman a beer, but that is a unique set of pearls, isn't it...
 
Yummy! Pave Tahitian Keshi!!!! I haven't seen that before at all! Bet that is a pretty penny---
 
That it is... an those pearls are not nearly as exciting.

I've seen this design done in bracelets in a few places, all good ;)
 
Wow! It's taken me a while to weigh in on this. That arrangement of Pau pearls just stuns me! What a beautiful suite. Words cannot do justice. This is carrying one-of-kind to its' top end. I'm sure there must be nothing else like it in the world. Simply amazing. Thank you for showing this to us.:)

It's been my intention to take part in this thread all along but I have nothing on a par with that grand spectrum to show so I won't even try. Rather, I will explore examples and issues on more of an individual basis. As well, I take part in PG more as a way to educate myself on many of it's myriad subjects rather than as someone with any related expertise (Other than goldsmithing.) When I weigh in on any subject I do so as a student seeking to learn and that is what intrigues me about the subject of this thread.

I think that there are a number of aspects to abalone color that we might look at. It seems to me that the color in these mulloscs is caused and influenced by several factors. Some of these are iridescence, the base color of the shell material, conchiolin, layer thickness, thickness of cumulative layers, shell transparency. . . I'm sure that there are other influences as well, such as weathering, sun bleaching and who knows what all.

I spent a few hours reading, rereading and checking out references in the threads of the Pearl Guide trying to understand the concept of "orient" over the last couple of days. After looking at shells over and over again and thinking about it I've come to the tentative conclusion that, for at least a couple of reasons, it doesn't apply to abalones, at least in most of them. I state this as an example of something we could explore and that I'd like to hear others opinions on.

I also find that it is quite difficult to discern the base color of the shell material--these things tend to be so wildly iridescent! I'm going to try to cut some very thin sections of the shell and look through them with transmitted light rather than refracted or reflected.

Since New Zealand Natural Pearl has us thinking in terms of color range, I'll post some pictures that I have taken that show some interesting variations of color in west coast USA abalones. The first two are from the edge of the muscle scar area in the center of the shell. The blisters themselves show the layered effect that the shell there has and these are good examples of the just how colorful they can be. It is also, I'm afraid, an example of how the time of day may affect the colors. These were shot very late in the day, near sunset and seem to by missing most of the yellows that I see in them more to the middle of the day. The third one is not at all common in that it shows somewhat more than a 50% preponderance of a gold color. This seems to be a result of a thin layer of conchiolin that was starting to be deposited at the time of it's demise. I have just a few mabe's that show this in varying degrees, this being the best example. This conciolin seems to be as hard and durable in the pink and red abalones as the nacre. The last picture is of a mabe' from a black abalone showing the lighter tone and the delicate shading to the iridescence in the shell of these creatures.

Marc
http://www.flyrodjewelry.com/home.html
 

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Marc - wow, thank you. Once again your post has made me feel privileged to learn from your knowledge and experience.

These examples are stunning. I have had no "soft spot" at all for abalone until I started reading posts from you and NZ ... thank you again. I actually love the luminescence of the mabe in the final photo - minus the wildly exotic colours of the others, it is gentle and natural and just oh so beautiful. Size? Intent for this piece?
 
Knowledge

Knowledge

Thank you Marc. The basic of pearling technology is so simple to understand, compared with the Natural Creation. It leaves more
questions than answers but let us all learn together.
Our observations of colour lay-up have led us to believe that
El Nino has a bearing on nacre production.
e.g.. If you polish a shell the outside will show nacre growth
in stages (similar to rings on a tree). We find every several years
there is an extremely thick layer of nacre - we assume that this would
apply to the creation of pearls.( We need to do more work in this area.)
We also find pearls in their early stage of formation tend to be pale in
colour until they lay up their first dark brown conchiolin layer. That,
in turn, when coated again with argonite turns the pearl into rich
green, red or blue colour. ( we will supply photos when camera is
fixed) Meantime another mixed colour photo - of Golden South Sea
Pearls and blue natural abalone earrings.Yellow and Blue earrings.jpg
 
I spent a few hours reading, rereading and checking out references in the threads of the Pearl Guide trying to understand the concept of "orient" over the last couple of days. After looking at shells over and over again and thinking about it I've come to the tentative conclusion that, for at least a couple of reasons, it doesn't apply to abalones, at least in most of them. I state this as an example of something we could explore and that I'd like to hear others opinions on.

(Haliotus genus serves as an argument against too closely associating iridescence with 'orient.')

We had a thread or two last year where yours truly attempted to disassociate 'orient' and iridescence, quite unsuccessfully?tantamount to divorcing vanilla from ice cream. What seems certain is that whatever disparate concept of 'orient' may locally prevail, it should primarily tease.
 
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