10kt Wg 8mm White Cultured Akoya Pearl With .69ctw Sapphire Ring Item: MCE015
 Price: $99.99
Product Description for 10kt Wg 8mm White Cultured Akoya Pearl With .69ctw Sapphire Ring-MCE01510kt white gold 8mm round white cultured Akoya pearl with .69ctw marquise sapphire ring. This ring measures 5/16 inch knuckle to knuckle.
Product Information for 10kt Wg 8mm White Cultured Akoya Pearl With .69ctw Sapphire Ring-MCE015
| Product Type: | Ring | Material Type: | Gold |
| Style: | Center With Color | Material Color: | White |
| Width: | 1/16 Inch | Material Purity: | 10Kt |
Primary Stone / Akoya Pearl
| Shape: | Round | Treatment: | Untreated |
| Cut: | Uncut | Gemstone Group: | Pearl |
| Color: | White | Optical Properties: | Iridescence |
| Dimensions: | 8 MM - Calibrated | Setting: | Peg |
| Composition: | Cultured |
Secondary Stone / Sapphire
| Shape: | Marquise |
| Carat Weight: | 0.69 |
| Color: | Blue |
| Count: | 6.00 |
| Setting: | 2-Prong |
Care and Handling of 10kt Wg 8mm White Cultured Akoya Pearl With .69ctw Sapphire Ring-MCE015 |
| Learn more about proper care of your gemstones and jewelry by visiting our Gemstone Enhancements and Treatments page. |
| Customer Rating |
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4.8
out of 5
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10 of 10 (100%) customers would recommend this product to a friend. |
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4
out of 5
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Satisfied customer,
June 17, 2008
Djm1
| Quality: |
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4
out of 5
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| Value: |
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4
out of 5
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"I bought this ring for my daughter's birthday. Pearl is her birthstone. She loved it! The ring looks exactly as it appears on JTV website. I would recommend this ring to others."
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Product met expectations:
Yes
Purchased as a gift:
Yes
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5
out of 5
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Great Pearl Ring,
June 6, 2008
oregonian
, Oregon
| Quality: |
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5
out of 5
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| Value: |
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5
out of 5
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"I just received this in the mail today and it is a beautiful ring. I have never owned any pearl jewelry and this is a very beautiful piece of jewelry. JTV has done it again."
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Product met expectations:
Yes
Purchased as a gift:
No
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home learning library pearl
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Fast Facts
| Once the price of pearls was so extravagant they caused wars and even funded a war, but today cultured pearls have made this “queen of gems” available to everyone. |
| Once, all pearls were only natural, most recovered from the Persian Gulf, occurring once in every 15,000 oysters. |
| Pearls form in the mollusk in a variety of shapes, including: round (spherical), off-round, semi-baroque, baroque, rice shaped, button or disk, and many fancy shapes created by the insertion of specially shaped nucleus beads. |
| Many royal families had an obsession with pearls. Some ancient Romans covered whole pieces of furniture in pearl, and in some monarchies only members of the royal were legally allowed to wear pearls. |
When light touches the pearl, it travels through all the layers of nacre, and each tiny crystal reflects the light like miniature prisms. The end result? A lustrous, breathtaking pearl.
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A pearl is a lustrous, organic gem produced by saltwater oysters, freshwater mussels and occasionally by some shellfish. It exhibits a range of colors from white to pink, silver, cream, peach, gold, green, blue and black. Oh Mohs’ scale of hardness, pearl is 2.5 4.5. Primary sources of Sea Pearls include Persian Gulf; Gulf of Manaar; along the coasts of Madagascar, Burma (Myanmar), and the Philippines; many islands in the South Pacific, northern Australia; and the coastal lines of Central and northern South America; and some small beds in Japan. Primary sources of freshwater Pearls include United States, some in Europe (restricted in Central Europe).
Color
Pearl exhibits a range of colors from white to pink, silver, cream, peach, gold, green, blue and black.
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