American cultured pearls?

Adeline Leigh

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Now that I have graduated to "ready for grafting", I think I will begin offering my learned opinion.
These pearls have pumpkin seeds inside them.
Linda.
 
LOL, Linda. They are intriguingly shaped, just like the Chinese lute called pipa.

American pearls like pumpkin seeds and Chinese pipa. Ironic.

Pattye, I've sent her message. Let's see if she'd respond and is ready to reveal :)

Can anyone make out the species of the oyster?

I sure hope this is not a April Fool's Day joke. Oh even if it is, heck, t'was a good one; I fell for it!
 
If it is not an April fool's joke, then who is the producer? American Pearl Company? They used to grow American freshwaters with beads inside, though I do not remember that shape. They still have some for sale, but I thought they were more conventionally shaped.
 
Adeline Leigh said:
Can anyone make out the species of the oyster?

The shell appears to be abalone. The adductor scar covers almost the entire photograph.

I doubt it has any relationship to the pumpkin seeds other than demonstration.
 
Update:

Laurie declined to mention what she knew by adroitly ignoring my questions. Can't blame her if she had first dibs. Apparently it is no April Fool's Day joke. Two of the pearls from the batch above are being set into a pair of earrings for a wedding. Will beg for a picture.

Yes, Dave, indeed, it does look like an abalone but did these pearls originate from that? Most likely the shell was just a prop?
 
Adeline Leigh said:
Yes, Dave, indeed, it does look like an abalone but did these pearls originate from that? Most likely the shell was just a prop?

They don't look anything like abalone pearls.

If I had to guess, she proably stumbled on a stash of them somewhere and is re-marketing them.
 
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