Am I right to say that 'light golden', 'golden with silver overtone' and 'champagne' are interchangeable names for the same thing - light yellow down to darker cream color pearls?
If so, between light yellow and deeper gold is a matter of taste and budget... and color treatment. For some reason, the deep golden color seems more 'formal' to me. The light yellow feels more wearable and casual. Or, at least, I am not living among ladies who don deep golden pearls for breakfast!
The darker cream might even be called 'white' by some and to me look 'natural'... my favorite shade of white. Bottom line, I'd rather have natural color then a dye job. And feel more at home in light golden.
Among golden pearls, dyeing seems to be quite a problem - many label them 'natural color', but those that come with proof of really having natural color are so much higher priced than the average. Even the dyed deep golden are somewhat more pricey than the light color dyed golden... but not even on the same order of magnitude. Something's amiss!
Recently, some crazy golden pearls came up on this forum. You must have seen them already, but just in case:
LINK
There is so much variation beyond the apparent color on a webpage (e.g.
LINK) that it makes me wonder... After all, the earliest reports of dyed pears were for fake golden ones. ANd those are not the least expensive 'deep golden' pearls. Some are very obviously fake, of course... but not when only seeing a picture. And relying on price alone for comparison is obviusly not the solution.
Earlier on, one of the posters here came up with
a comparison between dyed freshwater and dyed SS pearls - golden all. So that's another thing to look into. Obviously, these guys have described their pearls for what they were - dyed. How many do? If you'd go by sellers' pearl labels, dyed pearls do not even exist!
Of course, there is a good case for color enhancement for pearls as for anything else. Would rather know about the treatment, but apparently most do not ('cause disclosure just ain't there).
My 2c.
I would think you could contact sellers posting here asking whether they know if their pearls are dyed or not, and what there is in stock to choose from. Some websites have images of individual strands, some not.
Just one more thing. How about the strands with a mix of different shades of yellow and white?
LIKE THIS
With such a piece, there is no question 'what shade of yellow'. You get an entire collection of them...