Vietnamese Blue Akoya Pearls

tahitiangirl

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 16, 2006
Messages
73
Hi everyone. I am in the process of buying my first strand of akoya pearls, a blue strand from Vietnam. I love and have collected pearls for a long time and have avoided akoyas because of my concerns about nacre thickness.

However, I adore the blue color of the Vietnamese akoyas and want a strand for myself. Do the Vietnamese blue akoyas generally have thicker nacre than other types of akoya pearls?

Thank you!
 
Hi everyone. I am in the process of buying my first strand of akoya pearls, a blue strand from Vietnam. I love and have collected pearls for a long time and have avoided akoyas because of my concerns about nacre thickness.

However, I adore the blue color of the Vietnamese akoyas and want a strand for myself. Do the Vietnamese blue akoyas generally have thicker nacre than other types of akoya pearls?

Thank you!

I have regular white akoyas, some of them 60 years old and they're still going strong. I have other white akoyas with thinner nacre that wore out. I have blue akoyas and I love them, but I've only owned them a couple of years.

I would say any baroque akoyas (white or blue) will have thicker nacre than rounds. But Madamas, which are like blue Hanadamas will also have a decent thickness of nacre.
 
I heard pearls in warm water have thicker nacre? Also if you buy from reputable vendors the pearls should have decent nacre thickness?
BTW, as a Vietnamese, I am ashamed to say that I had never seen or heard about blue akoya until I found this foreign forum. I even tried look up Vietnamese websites about pearls but I havent found any information
 
The nacre thickness can definitely vary. It's easiest to gauge thickness with a baroque strand.

The colors you see don't come from the color of the nacre. They come from staining on the nucleus that happens sometimes with a somewhat botched nucleation. The staining is a brownish color, but it reflects through thick nacre in a sort of silver to blue hue. If the nacre is thin, the color is tan to a light brown.
 
Thank you Jeremy, for such interesting information on blue akoyas! I always learn so much from this forum....
Linda
 
So where does the pistachio color come from in akoyas? I think I read somewhere (Strack?) that pearls were originally more greenish yellow and were bred for a whiter look, but still had to be bleached.
 
This is a project for a Client (Cees supplied the Vietnamese pearls). Rhodolite Garnets and Cultured Blue Vietnamese Akoyas. (The extra Pearls are off to Sheri for a BPD vanity project).

Client Shot 2.jpg
 
OOOOOO, I can't wait to see the results. Blue pearls and garnets. Two of my favorite gems.
 
Oh I can't wait to see that vanity project ... beautiful choices Black Pearl Dude DC :)
 
How long will it take to get your finished piece back? Sounds very creative and beautiful!
 
Here you can see the bead and how nacre can grow in a same period of Vietnamese Akoya pearls
 

Attachments

  • kaku.pdf
    126 KB · Views: 155
Sarah, Kaku size 9 is 9 Rin = 9 x 3.03 = 2.727 mm.
So on a 6 mm pearl 80 % is pearl and 20 % is kaku 70-80 % kaku area
 
Back
Top