Help with intriguing pearls!

Joined
Feb 16, 2025
Messages
5
Hello all,

Long time listener, first time caller! I started collecting pearls a few years ago, learning as much as I can through places like these forums, and I've found some really interesting gems scouring thrift stores and online auctions.
I recently bought these for not very much money online from Goodwill. The colors and shapes intrigued me as I didnt have anything quite like them in my collection yet. They appeared much less iridescent in the original photos, which I've attached as reference, but that just made opening them for the first time that much more magical. They were also much smaller that I had pictured, but they had not been photographed with anything to show scale. I photographed them in purely natural sunlight on a windowsill.
As you can see there are many colors, levels of lustre, and shapes, from abstractly baroque to quite round, and measuring approximately 2-4 mm. To my eye they are natural colors, no signs of dyes or treatments. They are humbly strung on a doubled thread and tied off in a crude knot, the thread of which appears to have some age. In fact I haven't cleaned them yet because the thread seems quite fragile, and I don't want to risk breaking it.
I tried my hand at candling, but I don't have a proper setup at the moment. These are the best images I could get, taken of several different pearls in the strand. Any advice or direction would be greatly appreciated!
I would love any thought or opinions on where or when they originated. Are they freshwater, saltwater? I'm not particularly interested in their value, I just want to know about their history and purpose. Was this someone's collection curated over several years, a crafter's supply, or maybe simply a necklace hastily strung together? Who knows, they may appear to be altogether rarer and more exotic than I'm assuming they are. I would love to hear any theories, more for my own amusement than anything else! I've had so much fun learning through these forums, and I would like to be more involved. Thank you to everyone for sharing their knowledge and passion!

Kindly,
Pat

* I posted this under a different title, but it wasn't very descriptive. I hope I'm not being rude by reposting!

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