Lagoon Island Pearls
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2009
- Messages
- 2,055
She also informs me that the entire pearl industry is being over-produced and that it is increasingly difficult to make a living by retailing pearls alone.
China produces tons of freshwater pearls annually, as opposed to kilograms from saltwater producers in other parts of the world.
Tahiti has strict laws governing pearl farming. Pearls must have a minimum requirement for nacre thickness and must meet substantial legal prerequitistes for tenure, environment, marketing and export. Genuine Tahitain pearls retailing for $5-10 each, is absolutely impossible.
The lack of ethical trade laws in China makes it a breeding ground for misdeeds of epidemic proportion and we've seen numerous attempts at value-added schemes including co-option, misrepresentation, copyright infringement, bogus histories and outright fraud.
I don't wish to sound overly questioning of your expertise, but after having been made to feel downright stupid by some of your replies I have to ask if there is at least one of you who does NOT sell pearls for a living.
You asked an honest question and got an honest answer. Nobody enjoys informing anyone that they have been misled. For retailers, it would be a fool's errand to come to this forum and expect to pull the wool over the eyes of the many experts here. Many have tried and many have failed.
I work with natural pearls every day. I am also developing new proprietary techniques for pearl culture here in Canada and base my work upon honesty, integrity, sound environmentalism and transparency. I'd never consider such a huge undertaking at my own expense, if the market couldn't accomodate it.