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Latest Article FW In-Body Nucleation - Modern Jeweler

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Old 04-21-2008, 09:09 PM
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NUCLEATED FRESHWATER PEARLS
by David Federman


Fuji Voll has been waiting a long time to buy pearls like those pictured on the previous page. Some of you familiar with freshwater pearls may wonder why the Mill Valley, California, importer has been keeping vigil since they look, at first glance, like pearls from Japan’s Lake Kasumigaura that have been produced for decades. Take a second glance. These pearls are from China. And Voll paid four times more than he did for any of their predecessors for the honor of being one of the first American dealers to have these new-breed freshwater pearls in such quality and quantity. Honor, you say? Hey, they’re just a bunch of baroque pearls, right?

If this were anybody but Voll, and the jewelers he caters to, you might be right to be so dismissive. But Voll has built his company, Pacific Pearls, on a dedication to the contrarian premise that beautiful pearls do not necessarily have to be spherical, smooth, or uni-colored. So when he was offered two strands of these multicolored baroques, he paid the sky-high asking price. Try looking at these pearls through his eyes. To Voll, these baroques represent a major breakthrough: the production of attractive pearls using the difficult and expensive method of in-body nucleation. When Voll first saw such pearls more than a decade ago, they were so ugly as to be of only theoretical value. Beauty gives them practical value.

Voll is not alone in his excitement about these newcomers. Author-gemologist Elisabeth Strack sees them as proof of a new plateau in pearling. “You can see from the shapes, surface, and coloring that the pearls have been nucleated in the guts of the oyster rather than its mantle,” she says.

By inserting bead nuclei in the soft inner tissue rather than the mantle, which is closer to the outside of the shell, in-body nucleation produces pearls with deeper luster, highly nuanced colors, and mottled surfaces reminiscent of hammered gold. What’s more, in-body Chinese bead-nucleated pearls do not have the tadpole-like shapes common with mantle-nucleated pearls (which were aptly called “fireballs”). In-body pearls are more symmetrical, more spectacular, and pay tribute to the triumphs of Japanese freshwater pearl culturing. To pearl lovers, they invite overt comparison with “Kasumiga-type” pearls.

But don’t use the word “Kasumiga” in reference to Chinese pearls within earshot of Voll. Since the term is now a bona fide brand name for Japanese pearls, he uses only the broader term “freshwater” and takes offense at any reference to Chinese pearls as “Kasumiga-like.”

Classic Japanese freshwater pearls and their Chinese derivations are acquired tastes. So while pearl experts like Strack share Voll’s high technical opinion of these newcomers, they do not yet share his high aesthetic admiration for them. Asked if she finds them beautiful, Strack answers, “Let’s just say that I find them interesting.” Since it is doubtful that the Chinese have baroque pearls as an objective, this triumph of aquaculture is at best an intermediate step. Even so, Voll’s pearls predict a new era.

Go back to Tino Hammid’s picture for a moment. What do you see? The first thing you notice is that many of the pearls are highly variegated with colors that run a wide gamut of purples, pinks, oranges, golds, yellows, and whites. Some of the purples are dusky, others silvery. No pearl has a uniform body color. Next you notice the pearls have very textured surfaces, some with soft hammerings, and others with striations.

When I first saw this strand during Lois Berger’s annual pearl walk at this year’s Tucson show, I was struck by their intense iridescent play of color and their high, almost metallic luster. Berger, who has been leading pearl walks at Tucson for at least a decade, took me aside and told me that in her opinion Voll’s pearls were of extraordinary beauty and unlike any that she had seen before from China. I only wish photographs could capture the very animate and vibrant appearance of these pearls.

Although reminiscent of classic Japanese lake pearls, China’s latest in-body freshwaters offer greater size. “These pearls are all 14 to 15mm,” Voll notes. “Japanese freshwater pearls were rarely larger than 12mm.” Strack adds that she has seen some of these pearls as large as 20mm.

But even with norms of 14mm, China’s new in-body freshwater pearls send a warning shot across the bow of every Australian pearl frigate. “The Chinese are not out to produce the kind of pearls that please me,” Voll says. “They are out to produce round, smooth pearls that compete with South Seas production.” So far, harvests of such pearls are a lofty dream. But Voll expects the Chinese to continue at full throttle to reach this still-distant goal.

Presently, China produces nucleus-free South Sea look-alikes. However, since freshwater mussels produce nacre faster than saltwater mollusks, in-body nucleated round freshwater behemoths would have generous nacre coatings. The upshot is a spectacularly affordable alternative to South Sea pearls—with the added palette of freshwater colors. Of course, all this depends on the Chinese being able to produce in huge quantities.

For now, however, there are only in-body baroques. Nevertheless, given the sustained popularity of these shapes from South Sea farms, Voll believes that Chinese growers have a very good incentive to continue experimenting with in-body nucleation. When he tells me the price (I almost wrote “ransom”) he paid for the strands he bought, I think Voll and other willing buyers among vanguard pearl dealers are reason enough for Chinese farmers to push the envelope when it comes to in-body nucleation.


*** Poster's Note: I am having a hard time posting pictures of the strand, sorry to everybody! ***

Link To The Article!! http://modernjeweler.com/print/Moder...R-PEARLS/1$675
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Last edited by Ashley; 04-21-2008 at 10:35 PM.
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Old 04-21-2008, 09:39 PM
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May I help you post the pictures? I really want to see them. My email is
caitlin @pearl-guide.com
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Old 04-21-2008, 09:44 PM
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Hope you can help- the images were really interesting! Just sent you a Looonnnggg link lol via email
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Old 04-21-2008, 11:19 PM
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I enjoyed the article. Like Voll, I am entranced by these nucleated freshwater pearls. The texture and color available in them is really intriguing (but still really expensive).

I look forward to seeing pictures when you get them posted.
John
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Old 04-21-2008, 11:29 PM
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Nope. Can't do anything. the LINK you sent me is good, but you have to click forward a bunch of times to get to the pictures . They are on some kind of player you can't copy. It is a fun look though.
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Old 04-21-2008, 11:52 PM
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Darn, I could only see the one photo at the beginning of the article. These have to be similar to the ones Sarah posted a photo of earlier next to the true Kasumi pearls--the ones we saw on the Tucson Gem Show pearl walk.

Pattye
so many pearls, so little time
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Old 04-22-2008, 12:07 AM
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Sarah did indeed talk about these and post photos in "Chinese and Japanese Freshwater Photos" under this same Freshwater thread. It was back during the Gem Show in Feb. Maybe Caitlin will know how to link into the info she gave then and the photos also. She mentioned this article was coming out.

Thanks in advance, Caitlin!

Pattye
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Old 04-22-2008, 12:34 AM
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Yes - I was thinking about those gorgeous photos Sarah had posted earlier - they were spectacular! And, from memory, slightly MORE expensive than the actual kasumis?? Please someone correct me if that's wrong. Waiting for the link if it can be done... thanks admin for your efforts!

I am totally intrigued by the bead nuc FW's and these in-body ones seem just so desirable..

Last edited by Nerida; 04-22-2008 at 04:03 AM. Reason: spelling - whoops!
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Old 04-22-2008, 01:01 AM
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It's page 41.

When I pasted the link to page 41 here, it goes back to the front cover.

Anyway, click on the down arrow of the "Pages" box. You will see all the pages on display. Use the scroll bar on the right hand side and scroll down to choose page 41.
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Old 04-22-2008, 03:36 AM
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Here is the LINK to the thread with Sarah/Fuji pearls
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Old 04-22-2008, 03:50 AM
Pearlgully Pearlgully is offline
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Hi Caitlin,

I just emailed you the digital version of the April edition of "Modern Jeweler" magazine. Click on the table of contents to find the article, and you will see the picture. I hope that helps.


Yes Nerida, those pearls were expensive. Although I remember the wholesale price, I'm not sure it is appropriate for me to mention it here. I will say that I've seen some Kasumi strands for less money and some Kasumi strands for more.


Gail

Last edited by Pearlgully; 04-22-2008 at 12:40 PM.
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Old 04-22-2008, 03:55 AM
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I got the digital version and saw the pearls, I just couldn't get a copy of the picture over here, or get us linked to the correct picture.

I think if it is not you advertising your wares, it is OK to mention a price. I think people would like to know what the ball park is......
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Old 04-22-2008, 04:08 AM
Pearlgully Pearlgully is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Caitlin View Post
I think if it is not you advertising your wares, it is OK to mention a price. I think people would like to know what the ball park is......
OK. The wholesale price at the Tucson show was $15,000; retail I guess would be double that.


Gail
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Old 04-22-2008, 04:13 AM
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At least we have the photos....
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Old 04-22-2008, 05:15 AM
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Thanks again, Caitlin, for fixing the link--------------- AndThanks much to you also, Ashley, for the article----some of us don't have access to Modern Jeweler----------

You are Awesome!

Pattye
so many pearls, so little time
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