Caitlin
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2004
- Messages
- 8,502
I have been following this thread for a while- peoples' thoughts are quite interesting on the subject of orient-[FONT="]iridescence - as is the science.
[/FONT]I had to comment though, when you have Paspaley claiming the territory as though his pearls weren't just mammoth pearl plated beads- which they are- I start getting a sour stomach. Even though SSP nacre can be thicker than akoya nacre- 1 or 2 millimeters can't possibly give you much depth. I think Tavernier is laughing while the cultured SS pearl producers try to jam Cinderella's slipper on their big feet and claim the prize of translucency!
I never did like the Paspaley Mystique (only real with a capital M). I saw several of their biggest and best necklaces at the Tucson AGTA Gem fair in 2005 or so. Stuller was celebrating their new partnership with Paspaley and had some giants on lend at the show- "The Athena", "the Diana" "The Texas", The Grandiose" and a couple of other such goddess names for pearls of such size as rarely seen before in cultured pearls and I dare say never seen before in the old natural pearls. In these pearls, roundness and size trump all other attributes.
None of the Paspaley giants had any orient I could see. I thought they were rather on the dull and flat side, bland even. Their main thing was the size- and that was beyond a human scale. The Stuller folks allowed me to try a smaller version of the [FONT="]behemoths [/FONT]on- which I did. I held it and looked at it carefully from many angles and my final thought was, "so what"?
My daughter, who has an eye for seeing pearls --was not impressed by the Paspaley pearls - I think we saw a good range of samples in the display and none of them had anything like the iridescence in a freshadama strand (though we did not have that basis of comparison back then).
However, to read their website, you'd think they invented pearls and have the lock on what a pearl is. I beg to disagree. That final remark Steve quotes about perfect thickness and quality of nacre showing orient makes me want to gag. They have a huge stake in making their pearls appear the equal to, or superior of, old fashioned natural pearls- but they aren't- the SS cultured pearls Paspaley and others produce are just the best that can be done today, they are not the real thing, no matter what a court may have said.
As for that "only salt water pearls exhibit orient" remark- I think they should take that down. They are so very wrong and anyone who has seen a freshadama knows it.
Another thing, until this forum started making orient a criteria in 2006, it wasn't one for most people and Paspaley could use the term however he chose -much like the orient in the Emporer's new clothes, if you ask me!
[/FONT]I had to comment though, when you have Paspaley claiming the territory as though his pearls weren't just mammoth pearl plated beads- which they are- I start getting a sour stomach. Even though SSP nacre can be thicker than akoya nacre- 1 or 2 millimeters can't possibly give you much depth. I think Tavernier is laughing while the cultured SS pearl producers try to jam Cinderella's slipper on their big feet and claim the prize of translucency!
I never did like the Paspaley Mystique (only real with a capital M). I saw several of their biggest and best necklaces at the Tucson AGTA Gem fair in 2005 or so. Stuller was celebrating their new partnership with Paspaley and had some giants on lend at the show- "The Athena", "the Diana" "The Texas", The Grandiose" and a couple of other such goddess names for pearls of such size as rarely seen before in cultured pearls and I dare say never seen before in the old natural pearls. In these pearls, roundness and size trump all other attributes.
None of the Paspaley giants had any orient I could see. I thought they were rather on the dull and flat side, bland even. Their main thing was the size- and that was beyond a human scale. The Stuller folks allowed me to try a smaller version of the [FONT="]behemoths [/FONT]on- which I did. I held it and looked at it carefully from many angles and my final thought was, "so what"?
My daughter, who has an eye for seeing pearls --was not impressed by the Paspaley pearls - I think we saw a good range of samples in the display and none of them had anything like the iridescence in a freshadama strand (though we did not have that basis of comparison back then).
However, to read their website, you'd think they invented pearls and have the lock on what a pearl is. I beg to disagree. That final remark Steve quotes about perfect thickness and quality of nacre showing orient makes me want to gag. They have a huge stake in making their pearls appear the equal to, or superior of, old fashioned natural pearls- but they aren't- the SS cultured pearls Paspaley and others produce are just the best that can be done today, they are not the real thing, no matter what a court may have said.
As for that "only salt water pearls exhibit orient" remark- I think they should take that down. They are so very wrong and anyone who has seen a freshadama knows it.
Another thing, until this forum started making orient a criteria in 2006, it wasn't one for most people and Paspaley could use the term however he chose -much like the orient in the Emporer's new clothes, if you ask me!
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