Lapis Lazuli - LL02
- Product Code:LL02
- CompositionLazurite
- ShapeOval
- Weight11 Carat
- Size/Dimensions Mixed * * mm
- ClarityOpaque
- TreatmentNone
- OriginPending Classification
- CertificationNot Available
- Availability:Sold Out
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KD 25.000
From ancient cultures to today’s fashion
runways, lapis lazuli has long been prized for its intense color. There
is no color more present in fashion today than blue in its many hues and tones.
Lapis is popular for cuff links, bracelets and
signet-style rings for men, and occasionally as a dial material for high-end
watches. Piaget and Hermès are among the brands with recent models set with
lapis lazuli. Because it is found in large pieces of rough, lapis has
historically been used to carve objects as well, including bowls, vases, boxes,
hair combs, dagger handles, small statues and game boards.
Lapis is equally at home in statement pieces
for women as it in cuff links for men. Many designers who work with color use
high quality pieces of lapis for one-of-a-kind necklaces, rings and earrings –
Italian jewelry designer Marco Bicego recently introduced a new version of his
popular Lunaria collection entirely set with faceted lapis lazuli. It has also
become a staple gem of men’s jewelry collections, perhaps because of its status
as a rock – lapis is an aggregate, opaque gem, and is therefore perceived as
strong and hard, and therefore acceptably masculine.
Northeast Afghanistan and Pakistan are the
major sources of lapis lazuli. The mines west of Lake Baikal in Russia are also
a source, as are the Andes mountains of Chili. Smaller quantities are mined in
Italy, Mongolia, the United States and Canada. According to the Gemological
Institute of America, Afghan lapis is intense and uniform in color, and medium
dark or slightly violetish blue.