Help identifying/evaluating vintage inherited pearls

Nora1234

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Hi,

I’d appreciate any help identifying and evaluating these vintage pearls inherited from my late mother.

They are matching set and are an off white, darker color -
 

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Oh really?! Oh no.

Is there a way to confirm?

They have a subtly irregular and inconsistent shape to them.
 
Yes, I agree, imitation pearl. Look at how identical the reflections are and shapes so consistent.
The first place to look when suspecting imitation pearls is at the drill holes. On vintage strands there is usually peeling or there can be a build up of paint like swirls around the drill holes. The holes probably won't have the precise edge of a drilled cultured pearl.
Also a lack of occasional typical natural blemishes.
 
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I have owned imitation pearls that were not all exactly the same shape (the better to look real.)

Imitation pearls also glide smoothly when rubbed against each other, while real pearls feel gritty.

Also imitation pearls with a glass bead (which I think yours are) are warmer than real pearls. You can check this by placing some pearls you know to be real (or know to be fake/glass) in the same temperature environment for 30 minutes or so, then testing each against your lip, which is very temperature sensitive.
 
Oh really?! Oh no.

Is there a way to confirm?

They have a subtly irregular and inconsistent shape to them.
They look a lot like my grandmother's Richelieu faux pearls from the 1940's or 50s. The yellowed color. The lack of overtones. The graduated shape of the pearls in the necklace. The clasps. I treasure them. Lots of women wore faux pearls back then. Jackie Kennedy. Barbara Bush. Coco Chanel.
 
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Hi Nora,
You are very lucky to have pearls your mother wore. Yes, they are glass but they look to be in good condition. In the old days (1930-50's), they would often use a sterling clasp because sterling was cheap, in those days. When pearls gained popularity after Chanel started wearing them and Mikimoto produced pearls, the average customer couldn't afford real pearls. Many of our mothers and grandmothers wore their glass pearls proudly.
 
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