I'm interested in learning others' opinions on what sort of book or article you wish would be written about pearls and the industry. I'm a writer, and while I always have more projects in my head than I'll be able to finish in my lifetime, writing about pearls may be the best way to satisfy my pearl jag. What are the issues, the personalities, the lessons learned and the hoped-for pearl future that you wish someone would write about?
And along those lines, what are the best things you've read about pearls - aside from everything in Pearl-Guide.com!
This book is disappointing, but I have only put it through two of my four stomachs. I actually takes finishing it (ugh)
I kinda liked the part about Zeide and me- no objections except for some inaccuracies- like I did not meet Steve Bloom after the Strack lecture. I didn't know who he was, but, Zeide was the buzz. He may have noticed me. Everyone knew something was going on and Jeremy and I knew it from the inside. Dugga had more than a clue himself. He had been first to challenge Zeide publicly.
I met Stephen (SB) at the Star Pass Mariott Inn's Restuarant that evening. I was sitting at the P-G table when Stephen walked in and took a seat to my left. He told me who he was and about his book. He asked what was up with Zeide as he was scheduled to go visit her tomorrow. I told him Z had
sold FW pearls to P-G members and called them abalone pearls, pteria sterna pearls, placuna imbricata pearls- all kinds of species that were not FW.
Earlier, after the Strack lecture, I had given samples of various pearls sent to me by someone ZE had sold to, to Jeremy. It did not take the equipment at the GIA booth to classify them. When Jeremy saw them, he immediately said "Freshwaters, all freshwaters". Everyone agreed, so I looked at my Bahraini bracelet under the GIA equipment, instead.
I told SB that ZE was was busted for calling freshwater pearls by other mollusk species' names and selling them under those names.
I told him about her most recent revelations. She had confessed on P-G that her pearls were all freshwater pearls!
I told him about the "Lop Noors" (ZE's spelling) I told him about the Leonard Rosenthal Mikis. I told him if they were Mikis, they have a Miki clasp. He never looked at the clasp or he never mentioned it, but Zeide is the one who told us if you had a miki clasp and box, you could put any kind of pearls on the the clasp. The value of the Mikimoto is in the clasp and box, not the pearls. Whatever those pearls are, I don't believe for a second they are the originals. If they were the strand that Leonard Rosenthal brought to the trial, there would be some provenance, you betcha. ZE told us on the forum that those Mikis were tissue nucleated!
Is there any history that Mikimoto ever did tissue nucleated pearls in 1925? And that THOSE pearls were the ones which went to court! The trial was about what to call bead-nucleated pearls. Rosenthal
wanted the bead nucleated pearls to be called "cultured pearls" instead of "pearls". "Pearls" was to be reserved for wild, naturally grown pearls. To this day, technically, "cultured" pearls are Always supposed use the word "cultured" in any mention or ad copy due to this 1925 ruling in France.
Lots more to say, but I have a couple of stomachs to go to finish digesting this book.