A couple more for you all.
I was showing my friend Wes Rankin's website and some of the very beautiful abalone pearls there. He was very impressed with them and very disappointed with my pictures.
I just can't seem to get close to capturing the beauty of his pearls.
My pictures make the pearls look metallic and loose most of the colors, rainbows, and natural shine of the pearls.
The one pictured above on the right comes close to the beauty of the Rankin's but looses so much in my pictures.
Maybe it's because I know nothing about photography.
I have a cheep little digital camera and I'm taking these pictures without a tripod under lowsy florescent lighting in my office. LOL
Oh well, at least you get a rough idea.
Here is another of the larger one, shame it has a flaw on it.
The Pearl on the left is what we believe to be one of the rarest abalone pearls in the world.
This one comes from the "Sorenson" Abalone, or "White Abalone"
Please see the picture above of a white abalone shell and notice the luster and colors in the shell.
I'm unable to capture the beauty of the pearl so I will not be posting any more pictures of it until I get a more representitive one.
Sorenson Abalones were prized for there sweeter and better flavored meat and commanded a much higher price at market when they were availible. What made them so rare was that they were deep water abalones growing in depths up to 200 feet.
That put them well out of reach of sport divers, a trained deep sea diver using a helium-oxygen breathing mixture was needed to get them. Divers like that didn't come cheep and usually had a lot more important things to do than collect abalones.
I have seen statistics given that only one out of several hundred thousand abalones will have a pearl. Out of all the abalones harvested, only a very very small number of them were Sorenson's.
Therefore it is safe to assume that a Sorenson pearl is the rarest of the bunch. My friend comes from a family with generations of commercial fishermen and has never seen or heard of another Sorenson pearl.
If anyone of the experts ever has, or has another picture of one I would please love to see it.
I'll hire a professional photographer if needed.
Large Pearl:
size= 23mm x 17mm x 10mm
Round medium:
size 14mm x 8mm x 9mm
Sorenson:
size 14mm x 8mm x9mm
One well known person has contacted me, but I would have thought more would have been interested.
Dave