Showing posts with label wedding jewelry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding jewelry. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Lighten Up With Vintage Summer Jewelry!

Summer's a perfect time to show off your light-colored, lightweight, and lighthearted vintage jewelry! We love wearing ours to work or on vacation. Casual glass or plastic beaded necklaces in summer colors pair beautifully with a vintage or contemporary day dress, while plastic brooches and earrings go with just about anything. And let's not forget what a classic accent vintage bridal jewelry lends to any wedding.

Of course, vintage costume jewelry is always in style, in any season. But summertime gives you a wonderful chance to wear yours every single day! And we've picked a few of our favorite pieces to show you:

From CatseyeVintage on ArtFire is this Vintage 50s 60s 3-Strand Tiered Faux Pearl & Black Beads Bib Necklace, just right for day or night:

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And this Vintage 50s 60s 4-Strand Tiered Chunky Pink Glass Beads Bib Necklace:

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CatseyeVintage also has this on Etsy: Vintage 50s 60s Blue and Aqua Thermoset Lucite Choker Necklace and Earrings Demi Parure, Mint on Original Card:

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AfterDarkVintage has these lovely Vintage Bridal Pearl Cluster Clipon Earrings, Japan:

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And this pretty-as-can-be Vintage Deep Lavender Enameled Pansy Brooch:

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VintageBaublesToo is offering these summer brooches on ArtFire:

RARE Vintage Lisa Jewels Large Enamel and Goldtone Floral Brooch Pin

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Vintage AB Rhinestone and Yellow Plastic Large Butterfly Brooch:

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And, this Vintage Sarah Coventry Strawberry Festival Brooch, Book Piece

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Visit our shops for more vintage goodies!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Sparkle with Rhinestones!

With wedding, prom, and party season almost here, let’s look at “sparklies” that don’t cost a fortune. From chokers and necklaces with dangling bits of adornment to earrings and bracelets, vintage rhinestone jewelry is always in style.

But, have you ever wondered just what rhinestones are, or how long they’ve been used in jewelry? Well, I have, so I set out to learn more. An in-depth history would be too much for a blog, but here are some key points:

What we call rhinestones have been used, in some form, for hundreds of years. The royal and the wealthy would have copies of their genuine gemstone jewelry made up to wear out in public; if they were stolen, the real articles would still be safe. Probably the term most of us have heard to describe these older imitations of precious and semi-precious stones is “paste.” Paste gems were made of molded, faceted glass with a high lead content and backed with a metallic lining. These reflected light and, to a layman’s eye, sparkled like the real thing.

As time went on, the process of making imitation gems was refined. For example, early paste jewels were faceted during the molding process. Later, the glass was hand cut into faceted form for better quality, but this was extremely time consuming. In the late 1800s came the breakthrough that led to the modern rhinestone. Daniel Swarovski of Austria patented a glass-cutting machine that produced faceted crystals with more precision and with lightening speed. In the early 1900s, he began using glass with 32% lead content, resulting in stones that were far superior to prior types.

Rhinestones have evolved to include not only foiled stones, but those with “silvered” or mirrored backings and unbacked stones in open settings. The terms Swarovski crystal, Austrian crystal, diamante, Strass (after George Stras, a jeweler who worked in Paris in the 1700s and who produced very popular paste stones), and paste are used to describe more or less the same product, although the latter two are associated with older stones. There are many more descriptive terms as well. In the U.S., these imitation gems are usually called “rhinestones,” after the Rhine River region of Germany, where natural quartz stones that sparkled with color were taken from the riverbed. Once these were depleted, glass imitations were offered for the souvenir trade.

One of the last key developments in rhinestone manufacturing was the invention of the Aurora Borealis (AB) crystal. In 1956 (some say 1955; the Swarovski web site says 1956), Swarovski, working in concert with Christian Dior, perfected a metallic chemical coating process that gives the crystals a shimmering, rainbow-colored appearance. Most vintage AB pieces were made from that time to about the mid 60s, then fell out of favor. They since have regained popularity.

We here at Reflections of Vintage would like to share some of our rhinestone pieces with you!

Vintage Art Deco Blue Rhinestone Dress Clip, Earrings from Vintage Baubles Too:


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Vintage Art Deco Sterling Box Set Emerald Green and Clear Rhinestone Tennis Bracelet from After Dark Vintage

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Vintage Signed WEISS 3-D Pierced Tiered 3-D Double Leaf Brushed Gold Tone Earrings Accented with Blue and Green Pave Set Rhinestones
from Catseye Vintage

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Vintage 1930s Art Deco Pot Metal Rhinestone Brooch / Pin
from Vintage Baubles Too:

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Elegant Vintage Black Enamel and Clear Rhinestone Brooch Made in Austria
from After Dark Vintage

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Vintage 40s 50s Kramer Signed 3-D Dangling Blue Aurora Borealis AB Rhinestone and Crystal Earrings
from Catseye Vintage:

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