Δεκέμβριος 17, 2021
COLOR IN CULTURED PEARL HAS MANY CAUSES
Quick answer: A cultured pearl’s color comes from several natural causes: the species of oyster, the color of its shell’s inner nacre, trace elements in the water, and how light interferes across nacre layers to create overtones. In Tahitian pearls (Pinctada margaritifera) the dark body color is natural, set by the black-lipped oyster.
That is also why color matters so much in the lab. Reading the way color sits in the nacre is how a gemologist tells a natural color from a treated one — dyeing, heat or bleaching. The black-lipped oyster Pinctada margaritifera carries mantle cells that lay down dark, earthy-toned nacre, the same color you see lining its mother-of-pearl shell. So its cultured pearls come out naturally dark — grey, charcoal and aubergine with peacock overtones — exactly as the oyster intends, and never by dye.
#southseapearls #tahiti #indonesia #myanmar #pearls #culturedpearls #australia
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