Archive for April 20th, 2006

Jewelry and Gemstone Care & Cleaning Tips

Jewelry and Gemstone Care & Cleaning Tips
LiveArticles.org, CA

earrings, emerald rings, ruby bracelets, sapphire pendants; no doubt about it everybody loves beautiful gem stone jewelry. Gemstones are quite literally hard as rock, buy they can be damaged from careless handling and negligence. Here are some tips for keeping your gems and jewelry looking fabulous for years to come. Mothers Day Gift 1. Remember, even the hardest gemstone variety can be vulnerable to breakage if it has inclusions that weaken the crystal structure. Exercise common sense: if you have a ring set with a softer gem variety or an included stone, take it off before strenuous exercise.

Even the hardest gem of them all, diamond, can shatter in two with a single well-placed blow. Never remove rings by pulling on the stone: that habit may result in a loose, then lost, gem. 2. Most importantly, store each piece of gemstone jewelry separately so that harder stones don’t scratch softer ones. Almost every gemstone is much harder than the metal it is set in. Gems can scratch the finish on your gold, silver or platinum if you throw your jewelry in a heap in a drawer or jewelry box. 3. Rings in particular tend to collect dust and soap behind the gem, particularly if you wear them all the time. You need to clean them regularly to let the light in so your gems can shine. To clean transparent crystalline gemstones, simply soak them in water with a touch of gentle dish soap. Use a bowl of water rather than the sink to eliminate the risk of anything going down the drain. If necessary, use a soft toothbrush to scrub behind the stone. Rinse the soap off and pat dry with a lint-free cloth (you want to make sure threads won’t catch on the prongs) For diamond, ruby or sapphire, a touch of ammonia in the rinse water won’t hurt a bit and can add extra sparkle (for platinum and gold only, not silver!). Think twice before putting gems in an ultrasonic cleaner. Diamonds and rubies and sapphires will be fine but many other gems many not be, in particular emerald, opal, pearls, peridot: when in doubt, leave it out. 4. Organic gems like pearls, coral, and amber should only be wiped clean with moist cloth. Due to their organic nature, these gems are both soft and porous. Be careful about chemicals in hairspray, cosmetics, or perfume: they can, over time, damage pearls in particular. Opals also require special care. Never use an ultrasonic, never use ammonia, and avoid heat and strong light. 5. Opaque gemstones like lapis lazuli, turquoise, malachite, require special care because they are rocks, not crystals of a single mineral like transparent gems. There gem materials should just be wiped clean gently with a moist cloth. These gemstones can be porous and may absorb chemicals, even soap, and they may build up inside the stone and discolor it. Never use and ultrasonic cleaner and never use ammonia or any chemical solution. A little care and common sense can add life, luster and longevity to your precious jewelry and gems. Protect your investment by following the above guidelines. More Information can be searched on Google, Yahoo, Msn and other Search Engines. http://www.giftsronline.com

Add comment April 20th, 2006

Program draws bead on jewelry, culture

Program draws bead on jewelry, culture
Durango Herald, CO
April 19, 2006
By Thomas Munro | Herald Staff Writer

For a group of white pre-teens, it was an unusual argument.
REBECCA DROKE/Herald
Bennett Thompson, a Southern Ute tribal elder, talks about beading to a seventh-grade class at Bayfield Middle School on Friday. From left, the students are Ben Christner, 12, son of Becky Bauer and Tim Christner; Dwayne Lizer, 13, son of Byron and Dottie Lizer; and Caleb Rael, 12, son of Amy Daniels and David Rael.

“Males make (chokers) and they’re better than girls’,” Jimmy O’Brien said.

Some of the girls disagreed.

“It depends on the boy,” Kayla McCann argued.

“Boys are more into sports, and girls are more into jewelry,” Patty Powers insisted.

The children were participating in a new program at Bayfield Middle School, which invites the school’s largely white student body to learn methods and traditions of Southern Ute jewelry-making from some of the tribe’s most revered artists. The ties binding American Indians and Europeans have, from the earliest days, been strung with beads. This latest cultural exchange challenged white students’ ideas about who and what jewelry is for.

“I think it’s a really joyful way to learn across cultures,” said Scott Kuster, the sixth-grade Spanish teacher behind the cultural interchange, the first of its kind in the middle school.

Southern Ute Cultural Center and Museum Director Lynn Brittner, exhibit technician and artist Tim Ryder, education consultant Dan Cieloha and tribal elder Bennett Thompson converged on Kuster’s class Friday to teach several classes of 12-year-olds the basics of American Indian choker construction.

The choker is a necklace, broad as a belt, worn tightly around the neck. It is made of alternating white bones and colored beads strung on thin leather straps.

“The tying is complicated, but the rest is to enjoy,” said Morgan Box, daughter of Southern Ute Vice-Chairman Matthew Box and the only tribal member in the class.

Box said she was learning the skill, traditionally a male specialty, for the first time.

“I’m learning how to bead, and I’m also sharing about what I know,” Box said as she tightened a row of beads and bones under Thompson’s jovial eye.

Thompson, who has been a museum board member for 15 years, creates intricate beadwork, miniatures, tomahawks, pipes and bows and arrows. He regularly shares these art forms with students at high schools, Head Start classes and the Southern Ute Academy, all on a voluntary basis.

“I used to work with medicine men,” Thompson said. “They told me never ask for any money.”

While Thompson said he gladly teaches beading to anyone, male or female, the differences between traditional gender roles in Ute and non-Indian societies made the jewelry-making project an interesting departure for some of the students.

But with the way perhaps blazed by the popularity of men’s puka shell necklaces, several boys in the class proudly donned their finished chokers, seeming to appreciate the masculine force of the traditional ornament.

To others, the jewelry may simply have been pretty. McCann said she already had an outfit in mind to go with her choker.

Kuster has been spearheading the effort to develop a curriculum for culture instruction at the middle school. In one project, he asks students to write out their own cultural history.

For 12-year-old Powers, that cultural history might include the different tradition of beading she learned from her grandmother. Box’s cultural history would be more difficult to write at a time when the danger is growing increasingly real that traditions like Southern Ute beadwork will become confined to museums.

Cieloha, among those working on the design of a new Southern Ute cultural center and museum, said his educational mandate now includes teaching Southern Ute children to be conservators of their own cultural traditions, even while he continues to reach out to non-Indians.

“The contact is positive - it builds a foundation,” Cieloha said.

Kuster was pleased with his first effort.

“The kids loved it and appreciated it,” he said as class ended and white boys wearing elaborate chokers walked proudly out, into the judgmental halls of middle school.

tmunro@durangoherald.com

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