A young couple recently reached out to ask if I could make a wedding ring for them, using their collection of Family, and Personal jewlery. What a great idea! Some of the pieces were inherited, while other pieces were gifted to them. Even though this is a very exciting project, full of fun and family history, it can be a challenge to knit together a Beautiful project from a collection of Gemstones. Sometimes the Gemstones and Diamonds vary significantly in their quality, so that the new piece will not look balanced. This particular project is to be a wedding and engagement set. The first step was a thorough cleaning and steaming of all of the gemstone jewelry. After the cleaning was completed, I then graded the quality of all of the diamonds. Many of the pieces were commercial “mall quality” diamonds; one piece with smaller diamonds had top light brown diamonds, which looked good when next to each other, but do not play well next to a bright white diamond. Since we were going to make a pavee band, their juxtaposition would make the color difference obvious to the naked eye. it was a big color difference. Sorting out the brightest cleanest gemstones and the sizes that could work into a pavee style band takes time and patience. Most of the time comes into matching how well the cuts of the diamonds match. The last thing that you want is to have a beautiful bright field of diamonds only to be interrupted by a flat, dull non reflective diamond. The gold however is easy to repurpose. Usually the customer is given a choice of 18 vs 14 K white or yellow gold. The metal is cleaned up , any old solder is removed, and then it is mixed with brand new alloyed metal of the same caratage. So all in all, repurposing your jewelry may present a few challenges, but with a patient eye and careful callipers, a beautiful project can come to life. It can save you time and money. If you have old collectibles that you are not wearing, let’s see what we can do to bring them back to life! What Can I Create for YOU?
Michael Nutter Jeweler From Concept to Finished Jewelry Award Winning Jeweler since 1978 Call Michael for Quality Jewelry
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At LAST there is an affordable and durable, refractable replacement for Diamonds! At the end of the 19th Century, Henri Moissan discovered a mineral from a fallen meteriorite in Arizona. He took it to his lab, and deconstructed the mineral, and determined that it was silicon carbide. At about the same time, Edward Acheson set about reconstructing silicon carbide in a controlled environment. This brilliant gem is now known as moissanite, whether found naturally or when synthetically created. MOISSANITE. It has the hardness of the diamond, at 9.5-9.9 on the Mohs scale for gemstone durability. It has as much refraction or ability to SPARKLE as a diamond, and if cut properly it can sparkle MORE. The patent on the process expired a few years back, so there are alot of competitors in the arena.....not always a good thing because not every company produces Gem Color Cut and Clarity. However, a fine Moissanite of 1 carat retails for around $600 today, versus $6500 for a 1 carat diamond. As in all things, educate yourself about the differences, and check it out. Your Jeweler will not know the difference between a diamond and moissanite, using a Diamond Meter test, because moissanite appears the same as diamond in this test. However, the specific gravity or weight of the two gemstones is different, the optical character is birefringent (also different), it changes color at 150F, and has different electrical conductivity than diamond. So there are positive ways to differentiate the two gemstones. Consider Moissanite for your Fine Jewelry. Read more about Moissanite: https://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology/winter-1997-synthetic-moissanite-nassau Michael Nutter Jeweler
From Concept to Finished Jewelry Award Winning Jeweler since 1978 Call Michael for Quality Jewelry When I began my career in the field of jewelry design, the ARTWORK of jewelry design was organic and fluid. The textures were amazing, using wood, lava flow, and leaves that reflected the Back To the Earth movement of the 60’s. It was exciting and represented a BIG movement away from the 40’s and 50’s in jewelry design. In the 40’s and 50’s, design was straight forward with lines of diamonds, center stones, and generally yellow gold. Forward to the 70’s , which brought BIG yellow gold jewelry with Wide yellow gold bands and Lots of prongs. In the 80’s ring fashion changed and showed lots of Channel set diamonds, freeform designs flowing with smooth movement, accented with small diamonds in channels to compliment the center gemstone. And then there was the 90’s. BIG Diamonds, 2 carat center stones were all the rage! These designs were taylored to allow the Centerstone to become Centerstage. In the 2000’s, the price of Gold hit an alltime high. The field of jewelry design retooled and redesigned: mountings became light and thin! Micropave and small diamonds embellished almost every surface. Designs used very little gold, and A LOT of small diamonds. And then there was CAD Computer Assisted Design: the technology of the day RULES. Jewelry designs have become neutered, boooooring and cookie cutter. One Halo design looks just like ten others, they all look the same. I Believe that the ART and Feel of individually crafted jewelry has almost disappeared. My Hope is that Individuality begins to reemerge; That REAL design reclaims true artistry in the Golsdmithing Design Arena. Afer all, who is really proud of a Mechanical Technical Manipulation that is sitting on their hand, VS a hand made, hand set collection of Gems, with sublte and beautiful Technique. Unique in design, subtle in its imperfection, with organically generated artistry, NOT a DNA cookie cutter model! People will make the choice. I hope the human eye and hand will prevail over the CAD and Mechanisation that has taken precedence in the last decade. Michael Nutter Jeweler
From Concept to Finished Jewelry Award Winning Jeweler since 1978 Call Michael for Quality Jewelry Compliment that Solitare with an Elegant Wedding Band! Your choice of Sapphire, Emerald, Ruby or Diamonds as accents to the Solitare add contrast and character to your bridal jewelry. Changing the color of the metal also is a popular way to create visual interest; choose from rose gold, white gold, or yellow gold. Or consider a clean , polished band to keep a minimal stage, where the entire show is that Solitare Gemstone. Currently popular are micropave bands, which add visual texture to compliment that Brilliant Solitaire. Another traditional and favorite style of Wedding Band uses a channel set with Gemstones, to create a seemless pattern of light , to add brightness and Bling to the set. There are many stunning options to consider! Explore your options in Wedding Bands, and discover which will bring you delight. Michael Nutter Jeweler
From Concept to Finished Jewelry Award Winning Jeweler since 1978 Call Michael for Quality Jewelry How is a Custom Jeweler different than a Jewelry Store? A Jeweler makes their inventory and sells DIRECTLY to the public. Whereas a Jewelry Store , for example in a Big Box Store, or Chain Jewelry stores at the local shopping mall, purchase Jewelry from manufacturers and then resell it to the public. The pitfalls associated with buying from Big Box or Chain Jewelry stores are many. I see this often when new clients bring their jewelry disappointments in to me, asking for help! What are the pitfalls? First, the QUALITY is not up to my standard. Second, you will pay a higher price because of the middlemen involved and merchandise markup. Thirdly, your choice of Creative Innovative Jewelry is Limited. You might notice how jewelry at Big Box Stores and Chain Jewelry stores all looks the same, like cookie cutter jewelry. You owe it to yourself to seek out your Custom Jeweler for the jewelry that is right for you . Michael Nutter Jeweler
From Concept to Finished Jewelry Award Winning Jeweler Since 1978 Give Michael a Call |