IMPORTANT INFORMATION.
The JPF started at 10 a.m. today. At 10:15 a.m. we went to Tatsu Kuramoto's booth for a lecture on pearl quality. Tatsu is VP of JPEA as well as a pearl vendor.
Tatsu told us that the Hanadama certificates have become meaningless. Ten years ago (2015) when I bought my natural white Hanadama necklace from Pearl Paradise, the Hanadama certificate from PSL (Pearl Science Laboratory) really meant something. It gave all the information about the pearls I bought. But then everyone started wanting a certificate when they bought pearls, and the PSL started certifying lower and lower quality pearls with Hanadama certificates. Now, someone buying a Hanadama strand might be offered a really top quality strand for $5000 USD, and their daughter would whisper in their ear about something they saw on the Internet where a Hanadama strand could be had for $2000 USD. Suddenly, they thought they were being cheated, and they would buy the cheaper strand from someone else, not realizing that it was a lower quality strand of pearls.
Tatsu said that he no longer certifies any of his pearls. He wants people to judge each strand on its own merit, and not go with a strand just because it has a certificate.
Takashi told us that the Tenyo certificates, and Granpearl, and some of the other names that are being used recently for the top of the line Hanadama pearls, are basically to get back to what Hanadama used to mean. The names are different because each pearl lab that grants certificates has their own naming conventions.
Jeremy and Hisano bought some natural white Hanadamas from Takahashi Pearl Company. I wanted to compare, so I took off my 10 year old natural white Hanadama rope and laid it down next to the other pearls. The vendor immediately looked at my strand and said, "They don't make them like that anymore." And I understood why.
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Then we went into a 2 hour recorded interview with Yuko Yamashita. She is a professor of Marketing at Hitotsubashi University. She was interviewing us about our views on how best to market akoya pearls to the world. About how akoya pearls are viewed around the world. Are they luxury items, or are they considered beads. Do people really understand where pearls come from. Do they understand that cultured pearls are real pearls? Do they understand that akoya oysters filter the water, and provide a better environment for the fish and wildlife in the ocean? This makes pearl farming sustainable. What do they think sustainable really means? I think most people do not know enough about pearls or the culturing process. And that's why I'm writing this lengthy post about my trip. To get the word out about akoya pearls.
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At 6 p.m. we went to meet the teachers and students of the Japanese version of the Pearls as One course. Their course is in person with live teachers. We each gave a short talk about ourselves.
At 7 p.m. Takashi took us out for another multi-course gourmet meal that couldn't be beat. Betty Sue King joined us. We took up the entire tiny restaurant. The food was very artfully prepared and unusual. Sake for everyone. We were toasting, "Cheen! Cheen!" Finally I asked what "cheen" meant. Jeremy said it was Chinese for . . .
PORNOGRAPHY ALERT!
"Penis! Penis!"
IT WASN'T ME THIS TIME! OKAY! It wasn't me.
I think we all bonded, because we had the same sense of humor.
I passed around my travel diary for everyone to sign. I'm hopeless at keeping a regular diary or a blog, but I always keep a travel diary when I travel because I don't remember from one hour to the next what I did. My little book is packed with information. This is the first time I've ever transferred that information online. I hope you enjoyed reading about it.
OH, I forgot to mention my pearl purchase. Honestly, everything I was attracted to, I already had. Or, it was way out of my price range (Ritikea, cough, cough). Everyone kept grabbing me to advise them on pearls. I had fun spending everyone else's money, and helping them pick out pearls. But for me, whatever I bought needed to be something unique that I did not already own.
Yuko wore a very interesting ring which I liked, and I found one similar in style. Mine has two blue baroque akoya pearls set in 18K white gold.
My husband said, "I want to see this ring you bought." And then, "WOW! You can really see INTO the pearls." He gets it, and he's not even a pearl person. When you see pearls with really thick nacre and incredible orient and luster, you truly understand the beauty of pearls.