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Perles

Cuentas de piedras semipreciosas en distintos tamaños, formas y cortes.
Samples        View All (1120)
Lemon Topaz Carved Leaves
8 inch String8 mm Avg. Beads Size18 Beads Per ...
Prix: $35.00
Faceted Sunstone Rondells
10 inch String5 mm Avg. Beads Size44 Beads Per...
Prix: $65.00
Colliers en argent sterling sous différents designs et tailles, fabriqués à la main
Samples        View All (335)
Lobster Lock with Jump Ring (Price Per Six Pieces
Sterling Silver 11 mm Bead Size
Prix: $10.00
S Valentine Clasp with Rings (Price per Piece)
Sterling Silver 37 mm Size
Prix: $20.00
Pierres précieuses et semi-précieuses taillées à la main, non perforées.
Samples        View All (212)
Garnet mm Marquis (Price Per 10 Pieces)
5 x 2 mm Size
Prix: $4.00
Amethyst Marquis (Price Per 10 Pieces)
6 x 3 mm Size
Prix: $4.00
Pièces de bijouterie en argent sterling utilisées pour assemblage en bijouterie
Samples        View All (66)
Lobster Lock with Jump Ring (Price Per Six Pieces
Sterling Silver 11 mm Bead Size
Prix: $10.00
S Valentine Clasp with Rings (Price per Piece)
Sterling Silver 37 mm Size
Prix: $20.00
Perles de pierres précieuses dans différentes tailles, formes, et coupes
Samples        View All (29)
Multi-Sapphire Plain Rondells
16.5 inch String2 mm Avg. Bead SizeAvg. 264 Be...
Prix: $60.00
Emerald Chips
34 inch Length3 mm Avg Bead SizeAvg 298 Bead S...
Prix: $45.00
or perles plaquées en argent
Samples        View All (55)
Infinity<br>(Price Per 6 Pieces)
Sterling Silver 13 mm Size
Prix: $17.00
Gold Plated Circular Beads (Price per Pair)
Sterling Silver 10 mm
Prix: $50.00
Colliers en or 18 carats et apprêts, fabriqués artisanalement
Samples        View All (12)
Circular Beads with Knotted Rope
18 K Gold 4.5 X 4.0 mm sizePrice Per Pair
Prix: $65.00
Crown Star Caps with Knotted Rope (Price Per Piece)
18 K Gold 5.5 mm Dia2.5 mm Height
Prix: $65.00
 
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Beads from India
Beads have been made in India from the days of the Indus Valley civilization (2600-1600 B.C.) continuing to the present, often using precious or semiprecious stones. It is the continuity of the gemstone bead industry, whose materials, techniques, and styles have remained essentially unchanged for thousands of years, that is the central story of Indian beads.

Quantities of Indian beads from archaeological sites in the subcontinent, as well as early icons, reliefs on friezes, and literary texts, affirm that beaded jewelry has always been important to all classes of Indian society: rich and poor, sacred and secular.

This strong relationship between beads and religion still exists today in India. Worshippers of certain Hindu gods wear special beads to differentiate themselves from members of other branches of the faith as well as from non-Hindus. Followers of Shiva, for example, have worn Rudraksha, beads made from seeds of the Eleaocarpus ganitrus tree, since time immemorial, while Vishnu worshipers wear little wooden beads made of tulsi, the holy basil Ocimum sanctum.

In India, gems and precious metals were considered holy and believed to have protective powers. Gems were also offered to deities as a means of gaining divine assistance.

Some of the oldest beads in the world have been found in India. Disk beads of ostrich eggshell and an Olivia shell bead from Patne in Maharashtra date 23,000 B.C., and a bone bead and several cattle incisor teeth grooved for stringing found at the Kurnool Cave, date to 17,000 B.C.

India’s great fame as a bead making center stems from the country’s abundant and accessible supplies of a wide range of semiprecious quartz minerals: chalcedony, agate, onyx, jasper, and rock crystal. Gravels in some Indian rivers yield agate nodules, and shallow underground bedrock agate source are easily mined. This abundance of high-quality raw materials gave rise to the ancient Indian agate bead industry. (Some of the best-known Indian stone beads, often grouped together as agate, are more accurately described as carnelian/onyx.)

The size of gems is considered all-important in India, and it is unthinkable for an artisan to cut a gemstone to one-third its original size simply to add brilliance. Many a times in India, beads made of gemstones are cabochon-cut, accentuating color rather than light (making faceted jewelry seem excessively flamboyant by comparison).

Beadmaking in India has always been a full-time, specialized craft. For centuries, it was divided among experts in a specific raw material: gold, silver, semi-precious gems, precious gemstones, glass bedas etc. Here you can find all varities of Indian beads at one place. Other specialized contributors to the making of an Indian bead include the refiner, enameler, precious-tone merchant, cutter, polisher, and even the stringer (patua).

Currently, Jaipur is the primary center for the shaping, cutting, polishing and stringing of beads in India. Generally the manner of making finished beads in India is as follows: The rough bead forms are smoothed by finer chipping, then ground smooth, drilled, and polished. Grinding and polishing are done mechanically. The faceting of beads, a common practice in India since the third century B.C., is used to enhance the brilliance and luster of the stone, while hiding minor defects.

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