🌹Spinner rings for women / CZ zircons / Amethysts, blue topaz
Janet Horton
Message:Seller was very helpful. It was a choice between three spinners.
I have never owned one before.
It was difficult to narrow it down to one.
I must have connected the seller a dozen times.
I received my choice today. I am so pleased and cannot wait to wear it.
You are highly recommended.
If I could I would order the other two.
Thank you
Silver Ring. spinner ring Sterling SILVER and 9 ct gold🌹
I got the wonderful ring in the mail today. It is a great work of art and will be a perfect gift. I thank you from the bottom of my heart !
Thanks, greetings, Shalom aleichem and see you soon !
Matthias
Sterling silver ring / gifts for man / Jerusalem ring
Ron on May 16, 2019
5 out of 5 stars
This is an absolutely beautiful ring with excellent craftsmanship. I cannot believe it is being sold so inexpensively. I wish everyone could wear a piece of jewelry proudly displaying The City Of Peace, The City of David, JERUSALEM- the greatest city in the world. This company is very customer oriented and a pleasure to do business with.
Roman glass earrings/ orecchini argento / roman glass jewelry 🌹
Terese Loeb Kreuzer on Mar 24, 2019
5 out of 5 stars
I had been looking at these earrings for a long time and finally decided to buy them. They are interesting without being intrusive. For me, jewelry is more than adornment. I like the thought that I am wearing a fragment of something that is thousands of years old, connecting me to the person who made the glass and to the people who used it, who lived so long ago and I like supporting the work of an Israeli artisan.
Spinner rings for women | spinner ring | spinner ring women🌹
Isabel Julia Gomez Parra on Mar 20, 2019
5 out of 5 stars
Estupendo anillo,como siempre acabado perfecto,diseño espectacular.
Una autentica obra de arte de la joyería.
Atencion de la vendedora,muy cercana y comunicativa.
Recomendable .
Muchas gracias,Dina!!!
Great ring, as always perfect finish, spectacular design.
An authentic work of art from jewellery.
Attention of the seller, very close and communicative.
Recommended.
Thank you very much, Dina!!!
Tesh McMillan Oct 13, 2017
5 out of 5 stars
Absolutely stunning! I love the colours. I have already gotten so many compliments on this beautiful ring. Thank you so much, I will certainly purchase again. ❤️
🌹Silver and goldfilled bracelet sterling silver bracelets
daniela mancini Oct 24, 2018
5 out of 5 stars
maybe I'll be boring to always say the same things ... but the Bluenoemi jewels are beautiful, wonderful, fantastic .... this bracelet is delicious, small shiny silver grains alternated with gold grains ... every purchase I make from Bluenoemi is the certainty of an immense joy. Thank you !!
Bohemian chic silver ring , sterling silver jewelry , Bluenoemi ring
Chereen Langrill Jan 19, 2019
5 out of 5 stars
I am absolutely in love with this ring! It looks exactly how I expected it to look and the fit was perfect. Shipping was super fast. I've been wearing it every day and am sure I'll be buying more jewelry from this shop soon!
🌹Beautiful spinner ring for woman. Personalized Hebrew / English
Catherine Johnson on Jan 20, 2019
5 out of 5 stars
My husband bought me this as an anniversary gift. It’s absolutely beautiful! The inscriptions in Hebrew look lovely and the personalised message inside is a wonderful touch. The ring looks and feels beautiful, I’m so delighted with it! It arrived quickly and the seller communicated with us throughout to ensure the ring was exactly what we wanted. Thank you so much.
Antiquity and Beauty are combined in the Roman glass jewels. Roman glass jewelry is unique and beautiful. As a result of being buried for two thousand years in the Judean desert, the chemical reaction of earth, air, and glass produced yellow, blue, and pink colors that combine in an unusually striking way.
When Roman glass is joined with precious metals such as sterling silver, the result is an exquisite piece of jewelry that makes a special gift for that special person in your life. Roman glass necklaces, earrings, bracelets. Handcrafted with Sterling silver. Verre romain. Vidrio Romano.
Roman glass is an ancient glass, discovered in archaeological excavation sites in Israel and in other Mediterranean countries.
The fine Sterling Silver Roman glass Jewelryis one of the most popular types and styles originated from Israel enabling to wear an entirely unique piece of 2,000-year-old history.The Roman glass in this aqua-hued jewelry began life as a vase, jug, or vessel.
Uncovered from ancient Roman archaeological sites in modern-day Israel, each fragment has been textured and colored by centuries of wind and weather. Each bears the marks of not only its past life as a household or temple object but also the very earth in which it rested until being transformed into a unique accent.
The designs for the jewels are based on artifacts and drawings also discovered on the archeological digs.
Initially, in the Roman empire, glass was mainly used for vessels and available only for the wealthy. At that time, glass was manufactured by core forming, casting, cutting and grinding. However, since the invention of the glass blowing, glass was available to the public in vast numbers, mass produced in a large variety of shapes and forms.
Ancient Israel, due to its large stretches of sandy dunes and beaches, was one of the largest glass producers of the Roman Empire. These same sands helped preserve the glass through the centuries, shaping and tempering it into the jewelry-quality pieces being excavated today.
Today the fragments of the 2000 years old roman glass that were once part of the lip of a goblet, jar, or other vessel are used in Israel to create beautiful jewelry that mixes the typical blue and green old glass excavated from archaeological digs with silver or gold creating a piece of art and history to wear with love.
The History of Glass
Glass is formed when sand (silica), soda (alkali), and lime are fused at high temperatures. The color of the glass can be altered by adjusting the atmosphere in the furnace and by adding specific metal oxides to the glass "batch" (such as cobalt for dark blue, tin for opaque white, antimony and manganese for colorless glass).
A venerable legend perpetuated as late as the seventh century A.D. in the writings of Isidore of Seville gives a suitable miraculous explanation for the discovery of this elemental--yet truly wondrous--material - This was its origin: in a part of Syria which is called Phoenicia, there is a swamp close to Judaea, around the base of Mt. Carmel, from which the Bellus River arises . . . whose sands are purified from contamination by the torrent's flow. The story is that here a ship of natron [sodium
carbonate] merchants had been shipwrecked; when they were scattered about on the shore preparing food and no stones were at hand for propping up their pots, they brought lumps of natron from the ship. The sand of the shore became mixed with the burning natron and translucent streams of a new liquid flowed forth: and this was the origin of glass.(Isidore of Seville, Etymologies XVI.16. Translation by Charles Witke.)
It is not surprising that the ancient authorities thought of Phoenicia as the birthplace of glass, for the Syro-Palestine region did indeed become a major center of glass production in antiquity, along with Egypt. However, glass seems actually to have been "discovered" not in Phoenicia, but in Mesopotamia. Archaeological research now places the first evidence of true glass there at around 2500 B.C. At first it was used for beads, seals, and architectural decoration. Some 1,000 years elapsed
before glass vessels are known to have been produced. Vessels of glass quickly became widespread in the second half of the second millennium B.C. They were popular not only in Mesopotamia but also in Egypt and the Aegean.
The earliest vessels were core-formed. Opaque, dark glass in its molten state was wound around a clay core attached to a metal rod. The skin of hot glass was fashioned with tools in order to shape its external features. Lighter colored strands of hot glass were then trailed on the surface and often "dragged" to produce festoon patterns. The pot surface was marvered (that is, rolled on a smooth, flat surface to produce a level finish). Finally, it was cooled slowly before the clay core was
scraped out of the hardened vessel. This glassware typically imitated forms originally established for ceramic, metal, and stone vessels.
Somewhat later, the molding technique was developed, whereby glass chips or molten glass were packed or forced into a mold and then fused. After a molded vessel was annealed (cooled slowly in a special chamber of the glass furnace), it was often ground and polished in order to refine the rim and any other rough edges. One typical shape for molded vessels of the late Hellenistic and early Roman periods (c. 150 -50 B.C.) was the so-called pillar-molded bowl. Here exterior ribs radiate up from the
base, stopping abruptly near the rim to allow a smooth margin around the circumference. This type is ubiquitous; and it attests to the free and rapid exchange of ideas in glass-making throughout the Greater Mediterranean sphere.
Ancient Roman glass jewelryreached its height during the Augustan age, at the beginning of the Empire. This meant that in many ways the glass jewelry were deprived of much of the expressive freedom one might expect and hope for. The buyers of this fine artistic jewelry were the conservative political. The period of peace
achieved during the rule of Augustus and Augustus made this possible, especially after the vicious fighting of the Roman civil wars.
Roman jewelry in earlier times was derived from both Hellenistic and Etruscan jewelry. In addition, as Roman jewelry designs freed itself of Hellenistic and Etruscan influences, greater use was made of colored stones such as: topazes, emeralds, rubies, sapphires, and pearls. Trojan and Cretan artisans of the Minoan period, although working at opposite ends of the Aegean region, crafted earrings, bracelets, and necklaces of a common type that persisted from about 2500 BC to the beginning of the
Classical period of Greek art 479 BC - 323 BC.
Roman jewelry was highly influenced by some of the designs of the places they conquered and established connections with. The creators spared no effort in making some of the most exquisite and ornamental compositions. Rings were a major symbol in the body of ancient Roman glass jewelry. Ornamental Roman jewelry was worn by women of high status. They often wore jewelry on their ears, neck, arms and hands. Ancient Roman designs and fashion jewelry also included seal rings, amulets and
talismans. The cameo and hoop earrings were introduced in ancient Roman times.
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