Fashion Jewellery
History
Fine and Fake Jewellery
In the ancient world gold was the preferred metal for
making jewellery. It was rare, did not tarnish and best of all it was
malleable, so it could be worked fairly easily. Magnificent bracelets,
pendants, necklaces, rings, armlets, earrings, diadems, head ornaments,
pectoral ornaments and collars of gold were all produced in ancient
Egypt, the land of the Pharaohs.
Excavations by Howard Carter in 1922 led to the great
discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb and many gold funerary artefacts, all
showing the art work of ancient Egypt.
Gold funeral mask of King Tutankhamun.
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In ancient Greece, beads shaped as natural forms like
shells, flowers and beetles were manufactured on a large scale.
Beautiful and delicate necklaces and earrings were found in burial sites
in Northern Greece. By 300 BC the Greeks were making multi coloured
jewellery and used emeralds, garnets, amethysts and pearls. They also
used coloured stones, glass and enamel. Carved cameos of Indian
Sardonyx (a striped brown pink and cream agate stone) along with
filigree gold work were widely made. Beads were made by joining two
flat pieces of gold and filling them with sand.
| Greek earrings.
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Eight centuries BC the Italian Etruscans in the
Tuscany region produced granulated textured gold work. They made large
fibulae or clasps, necklaces, bracelets and earrings. They also made
pendants that were hollow and could be filled with perfume. The Italians
are still renowned for high quality stylish trend making gold work
today.
In coinage the Romans used 18 and 24 carat gold.
Being fairly easily available the coinage was the craftsman's raw
material for decorative jewel work. 2000 years ago the Romans were
using sapphires from Sri Lanka, cloudy emeralds, garnets, amber and
Indian diamond crystals. When England was under Roman rule, fossilized
wood called jet from the North of England was carved into interesting
pieces.
Sumptuary Laws in C13th Medieval Europe
came into force and capped luxury in dress and jewellery. Townspeople
in France, were not allowed to wear girdles or coronals made of pearls,
gemstones, gold or silver. Similar laws existed in England. The fact
that these laws forbade yeomen and artisans from wearing gold and silver
indicates how the status of jewellery and sumptuous dress had become
widespread beyond just the nobility.
Jewels have always been used as love tokens and whilst
many pieces were fine gems and precious metals, good fake jewellery
intended to deceive existed. True gemstones and pearls originated from
the east and were bought chiefly by the Italians. The Italian merchants
then sold the goods on in Europe. Good glass imitations were often used
and sometimes with intent as in royal funerary robes and children's
jewellery.
Flawless, round, natural, large white pearls were
prized more than precious gemstones. The finest of pearls were provided
by South India and the Persian Gulf. The Italians, particularly the
Venetians and people from Murano, could make imitation glass gems and
pearls that were very good likenesses of the real jewels. Recipes for
false pearls existed in 1300 when white powdered glass mixed with
albumen (egg white) and snail slime, produced beads that were used as
imitation pearls.
In the C17th a woman always donned her
earrings whether dressed or undressed. By day fake pearl earrings and
paste earrings to coordinate with clothing were acceptable. Fine diamond
jewellery was kept for evening and
embroidered stomachers which formed part of the dress
frontage, could be decorated by jewels. Suites of left and right
coordinating jewelled pieces called dress ornaments decreased in size as
they were placed down the stomacher. Sometimes the sleeves or skirts
were decorated with smaller matching brooches.
| Dress ornaments
in the form of diamond bows and shuttles.
As many as 42 shuttles could be used to
decorate a dress.
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In the 1630s large quantities of pearls were used as
clothing accessories. To be truly fashionable pearls needed to be worn
in abundance. In the C17th, Jaquin of Paris patented a
method of making fake pearls. He coated blown glass hollow balls with
varnish mixed with iridescent ground fish scales. The hollow balls were
then filled with wax to strengthen them. This method made Paris the
main producer of fake pearls for over 200 years.
Paste is a compound of glass containing white lead
oxide and potash. Paste jewellery was usual in the 1670s and was worn
at court. The best and most long lasting paste jewellery was produced
after 1734 by Georges Strass. Most fake jewellery was Paris led. Just
about any kind of fake gem could be made, including fake opals. Many
pieces of fake jewellery have survived in their original setting, but
fine estate pieces of real gems were often broken up for resetting into
more fashionable styles of the era.
After 1760 the production of fake jewellery spread to
London and to Birmingham. Steel which was produced easily during the
industrial revolution was used for settings for marcasite and jasper
ware cameos. Glass and Wedgwood porcelain paste cameos were made in
English factories and were very popular too.
Ornate shoe buckles of paste, steel and tin were part
of fashionable dress. A similar fad at this time were elaborate paste
jewelled buttons, fashionable in British society. As well as fake
jewellery gaining popularity, semi precious jewels such as uncut garnets
became usual as part of less formal day dress.
When Napoleon eventually emerged as Emperor of France
in 1804 he revived jewellery and fashion as a new court of pomp and
ostentatious display evolved.
'Joailliers' worked fine jewellery and 'bijoutiers'
used less precious materials.
The members of the new French imperial family had the
former French royal family gems re-set in the latest neo-classical
style. These new trends in jewellery were copied in Europe and
particularly England. Greek and Roman architecture were the main
influence for designs as famous discoveries of ancient treasure had not
yet happened.
Parures were a matching suite of coordinating precious
gems which could include a necklace, a comb, a tiara, a diadem, a
bandeau, a pair of bracelets, pins, rings, drop earrings or and cluster
stud earrings and possibly a belt clasp. Both
Josephine and later Napoleon's second wife had magnificent
sets of Parures.
| Parure consisting
of bracelet, necklace, ring and earrings. |
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After Napoleon's cameo decorated coronation crown was
seen, cameos were the rage. Sometimes cameos were carved from hardstone,
but more often from substitutes like conch shells and set pieces of
Wedgwood porcelain.
| Carved cameo
scene.
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When Queen Victoria came to the throne in 1837
jewellery was romantic and nationalistic. It gave attention to the
pressure of European folk art, which later influenced the Arts and
Crafts Movement. Until mid century most western jewellery came from
Europe, but soon jewellery began to be made in America and Australia.
Although jewellery had been made by multiple methods
of production for centuries, mid Victorian mass production in Birmingham
(England), Germany and Providence, Rhode Island meant that standards
were lowered. Victorian women rebelled when they saw some of the
machine made jewellery on offer, although much of what has survived is
of good quality. Many wore no jewellery at all, or bought from the
artist craftsman jewellers who emerged at much the same time. Some
jewellers like Tiffany began to make fine jewellery of such high
standard that they soon opened shops in main cities of Europe.
| Victorian garnet
necklace.
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There was a huge fashion for mourning jewellery which
highlights how sentimental the Victorian age was. The initial months of
mourning were unadorned by jewellery of any kind. As the mourning
rituals increased, mourning jewellery developed as a fashion item. Jet
jewellery was worn a great deal by Queen Victoria after Prince Albert's
death.
Jet from Whitby, North of England was set into
mourning pieces. All types of material that were black were used and
almost all included a lock of the dead loved one's hair. Hair was also
plaited, braided or twisted very tightly until it became hard and thread
like. To many of us living in the twenty first century the use of hair
is an unattractive side of some antique jewellery.
The new design philosophy of Arts and Crafts that
sprang up after 1870 was a reaction to mass produced goods and inferior
machine made products. It was a reaction to the shoddy interior and
ornamental products of the industrial revolution. Leaders of the
movement in England included
William Morris and John Ruskin and they promoted simple Arts and
Crafts of designs based on floral, primitive or Celtic forms worked as
wallpapers, furniture and jewellery.
The polished stones used in Arts and Crafts jewellery
gave a medieval, simpler, gentler, tooled hand made look and feel to
items. People inspired by the movement to produce work of a more
individual nature included Liberty of London and Renee Mackintosh of
Glasgow. By 1900, Arts and Crafts as a movement declined, so Art
Nouveau, a more ostentatious version started in France took root.
Art Nouveau jewellery follows curving sinuous organic
lines of romantic and imaginary dreaminess, with long limbed ethereal
beauties sometimes turning into winged bird and flower forms. The
movement began in Paris and its influence went throughout the Western
world.
The Frenchman René Lalique was the master goldsmith of
the era of Art Nouveau producing exquisite one off pieces. As an art
movement today, the style is still admired and still copied.
Magnificent floral and botanical forms often worked in
enamel were inexpensive and became so popular once mass-produced, that
the Art Nouveau style declined.
Most fine jewellery in the 1900s was white and made
from either diamonds or pearls. Queen Alexandra initially wore dog
collar chokers, called a 'collier de chien' to cover a small scar on her
neck.
| Queen Alexandra
who wore pearls from neck to waist. |
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For state occasions and formal events she plastered
herself in arrangements of pearl necklaces. The rarity value of real
pearls then was such that an American skyscraper exchanged hands for the
price of a pearl necklace. This is not so ridiculous as it seems, as
fine south sea pearls still command a high price.
Pearls were very fashionable, but still very, very
costly. After the 1890s Kokichi Mikimoto of Japan produced highly
acceptable cultured pearls by placing a small bead into an oyster
shell. The bead coated itself with nacre (mother of pearl) and so good
looking pearl jewels became more affordable.
When I see Mikimoto pearls today I always think their
lustre far surpasses any other pearl made this way.
Pearls
Various combinations of pearl necklaces come in and
out of fashion with regularity so pearls too are a must. Both fake and
real freshwater or cultured pearls are very affordable today. Many are
now bought from China since trade opened up in the nineties. The price
of pearls has dropped by about a fifth in the past 10 years and the
Chinese are making waves in the pearl world with their cheaper prices.
The Japanese have suffered disease in their pearl beds as well as facing
competition and are finding it hard to compete with China's prices.
Pearl necklaces and pearl earrings can lift a
complexion and bring light and radiance to the face taking years off a
woman whatever her age. If you can afford it, invest in a pair of Mabe
pearl earrings. They have a wonderful white glow with a size about one
centimetre across and look expensive. Expect to pay about £300 for a
pair trimmed with 9ct gold. Look after them by rubbing
gently with a pure silk scarf, store in their original box and always
put them on after applying perfume and hair products. A matching real
pearl necklace freshwater or cultured, will enhance them and you.
Pearls are currently back in fashion again and with
the modern twist of being interspaced on gold wire or floating on
special synthetic cord they are essential to the millennium look. Look
out for variations too on drop pearl earrings in the next year or so.
In the 1920s Lalique designed good mass produced
quality glass jewellery. Fake, or costume jewellery was sometimes then
called cocktail jewellery. It was greatly influenced by
Coco Chanel (1883-1971) and Elsa Schiaparelli (1890-1973). They
both encouraged clients to use costume jewellery and to mix it with
genuine gem pieces they already owned. Both designers offered
imagination and fun and both often sported fabulous fakes.
In the late 1930s Napier of the USA was at the
forefront of manufacturing fake cocktail jewels, which offered glamour
and escapism. Napier still produces excellent contemporary costume
pieces.
By the 1940s and 1950s American culture was very
dominant in Europe. The influence of movie films and the prominence of
film stars set the fashion in manners, make-up, hair and clothes.
People wanted look alike copies of outfits and jewellery worn by screen
idols. It was widely believed that Hollywood glamour would rub off on
you if you had the clothes and developed the look.
The Second World War in Europe halted production of
fine jewellery when metals were rationed. New estate type, fine
precious metal and gem jewellery was simply not available. Quality
costume jewellery which was flourishing in America, became much more
acceptable and was a real alternative to fine jewellery.
Because of technical advances in production methods, a
huge range of styles was available from America, and since it was so
popular the market became dynamic and inventive and affordable.
In the 1980s there was a huge revival of costume
jewellery after the glitzy scenes from the television soap operas Dynasty and
Dallas were watched by 250 million viewers in the consumer boon
of the 1980s. Diamante by day became the norm in reality and earrings
reached such huge proportions that the 1990s saw a reaction which
quickly dated lavish dress jewellery as the fashion for tiny real
diamond studs or a fine stud pearls became the only earring to wear. As
soon as the fashion was declared dead by everyone, including
grandmothers, it was revived again in 2000AD by the fashion
cognoscenti. Now fabulous fakes, especially brooches have gained ground
once more.
Costume jewellery can enliven a fashion wardrobe and
bring a dash of panache especially for one off special occasions.
Costume jewellery can be superb. The superb is usually plated at least
seven times with 18 or 22 ct gold.
For example Joan Rivers does a range of good costume
jewellery modelled on original fine gem pieces. One of her trademarks
is to make jewellery doubly useful and she produces sets of
interchangeable earrings, pendants and tennis bracelets. For example
you might be able to slip a range of up to 10 different coloured stones,
pearls or Swarovski crystals into an 18ct gold plated earring
to vary the look. Her jewellery is exclusive to the QVC shopping
channel in the UK and she is constantly working on new ideas such is her
enthusiasm.
Highest grade Cubic Zirconium man made imitation
diamonds often set in precious metals is of such a good standard that
almost everyone can afford to have attractive jewellery.
The best crystals used in costume jewellery are the
first grade crystals that the top Austrian firm Swarovski can offer.
Some of the costume jewellery I have come to love,
comes from companies like Ciro, Adrian Buckley, Butler and Wilson,
Swarovski Crystal Jewelry
Napier, Joan Rivers, Joan Collins, Christian Dior, California Crystal,
Property of A Lady and of course Kenneth J Lane.
| Butler and
Wilson costume brooch.
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