pearlescence
purveyor of pearls UK/EU
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2007
- Messages
- 4,112
But I never did get the answer!
I believe we have discussed this subject intensively over the years. Let me see if I can find the threads.I love seeing tangents on questions! You guys are awesome
Someone recently asked me if the surgical procedure for pearl culturing was painful for the mollusk. I don't have good access to journals any longer and couldn't really find any information on whether mollusks have pain receptors in their nerve endings. Does anyone here know? I presumed that yes they do because it could be a triggering response to parasitic invasion. I hate to presume though....
The above lot, which was saved from its alternative fate in Hong Kong, has been sorted in preparation for design work. That perfect golden drop is 7mm x 8.7mm. It looked smaller in the live stream, so a nice surprise!Alex Collins just arrived into town today. He owns a Tahitian pearl farm on Takaroa and brought a bunch of special pieces to do a live stream from our office tomorrow. I thought he was only bringing Tahitians, but he brought his collection of natural Pipi too!
View attachment 468043
I can't wait to see the finished piece!The above lot, which was saved from its alternative fate in Hong Kong, has been sorted in preparation for design work. That perfect golden drop is 7mm x 8.7mm. It looked smaller in the live stream, so a nice surprise!
They don't have a brain, hence pain is not processed the same way. In nature, creatures like mussels survive where even other molluscs cannot. These settings are often fraught with environmental stresses. Storms, falling or tumbling rock, logs ashore, radical temperature shear, predation etc. occur commonly.I love seeing tangents on questions! You guys are awesome
Someone recently asked me if the surgical procedure for pearl culturing was painful for the mollusk. I don't have good access to journals any longer and couldn't really find any information on whether mollusks have pain receptors in their nerve endings. Does anyone here know? I presumed that yes they do because it could be a triggering response to parasitic invasion. I hate to presume though....
PIECES!I can't wait to see the finished piece!
Thanks all, yes I think it’s turning out as well as hoped, and the frosting on the cake would be exactly as Pattye says, that it be wearable.What a beauty and such a delight to wear!
That’s going to be very prettySharing a little progress with the Poe Pipi lot from Alex Collins, here with a snapshot from the jeweler's desk.
While my idea is to mass the pearls for cumulative effect, the 8.7mm drop had to remain apart as it would make a striking pendant on its own (and is of comparative value to the remainder of the lot).
But there are rounds in matching pairs that also merit exclusion. This delicate tincup necklace would be the result. As the pearls are perfect the necklace is to be two-sided.
I’m just a pearl lover and wearer but have really enjoyed reading your conversations. This is all so interesting!In the absence of a scientific section, a scientific discussion may arise or be questioned in other threads nonetheless. For some who don't strictly adhere to the tenets of science, comments may be misconstrued as an affront or ill-informed. Whilst incorrect, mythical or all-or-nothing comments are made, these may often derail the original poster's topic or otherwise be moderated/locked by admins without resolution.
P-G is an educational forum, but one of marketing, fashion, history, limited identification etc., but not objective science or research. Not everything in pearl science can be cited, but collective observation, speculation and replication within that context ought to be acceptable. Especially when controls are disclosed or demonstrated. In debunking inaccuracies, falsehoods or pseudoscience, open discussions are what flesh these things out.
I don't buy pearls. I don't (necessarily) sell pearls. I don't wear pearls. I study pearls in biology, archaeology, paleontology, ecology and origin. Even under all of those disciplines, my contribution here is generally confined to identification from limited imagery.
Most of that goes over heads, but there are those where it doesn't. Objective scientific discussion oft requires an extra layer of moderation, thus a reasonable explanation for it's absence. I'm sure the moderators are already considerably burdened in their ongoing tasks.