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The Jewelry includes vintage decades of styles from different periods. Each season offers a huge range of designs. Watch carefully designs jewelry from various eras and you can sharpen your focus:
* Jewelry Georgian (1714-1837): Georgian jewelry was crafted and the quality of every single piece varies. The Georgian jewelry often stands out for ways of leaves, birds, flowers and other designs inspired by nature. The Georgian jewelry may also include stones such as garnets, pink diamonds, precious coral and topaz.
* Romantic Jewelry of early Victorian (1837-1850): jewelry classic Romantic period, as the Georgian reflects the nature across designs based on plant life - and fauna often recorded by hand in intricate gold filigree. The sentimental jewelry such as brooches and medallions were popular pieces during that time, as colored gemstones and diamonds for use at night.
* Magnificent Jewelry mid-Victorian (1860-1880): the Grand period coincided with the death of Albert, the husband of Queen Victoria, pushing a period of mourning. Certain pieces of jewelry from Grand period have a tenuous design, austere and sombre. Known as the mourning of jewelry, these pieces stand out as having dark and heavy stones, particularly the jet, as well as onyx, amethyst and garnet deep red. The Grand period also introduced new ways of using stones and metals in jewelry, which inspired more bold and colourful designs that stand out for the classics ornaments made of mosaics, sea shells, jasper and amethyst. The Japanese are also common themes in this period.
* Jewelry aesthetics of late Victorian (1885-1900): The jewelry designers of the period aesthetic used diamonds and gemstones with feminine colors such as sapphire, Peridot and espinel. The pins were very popular in hat at that time, like hats that were a fashion accessory. The reasons for stars and medialunas, as seen in lace pins and brooches, also were common during this period.
* Jewelry Arts & Crafts (1894-1923): technology masses of the Industrial Revolution inspired a backlash among designers of the era of arts and crafts and a return to the intricate craftsmanship of days earlier. The jewelry of this period was often crafted, bright colours and stones without clean cut.
* Jewelry Art Nouveau (1895-1915): led by Rene Jules Lalique in France and in other americas, the elegant Art Nouveau filled with flowers such as lilies and insects, dragonflies emblemáticamente.
* Jewelry Edwardian (1901-1910): After the death of Queen Victoria, her son Edward assumed the throne, heralding an era Eduardiana. This period was reflected in the lavish diamond jewelry and pearls adorned with emeralds, rubies and other precious stones placed in bright designs and decorative detail.
* Fashion Jewelry Rings Art Deco (1920-1935): Art Deco jewelry emphasizes geometric shapes, lines and strong contrasts of bright colors. This style was influenced by issues Egyptians, Africans and Japanese, as well as Cubism and the reasons for speed (as in air travel and automobiles). The Bakelite, celluloid and enamel were used frequently during this period, as well as the doubles. The bracelets were very successful during this era, women wore several at once. The necklaces were extremely long and had stones of amber and Venetian, as well as artificial pearls and glass beads, commonly carried in chokers.
* Jewelry Retro (1940): the colorful and elaborate jewellery retro period, highlighted by unusual traces of gold and precious stones such as the dazzling citrina and aquamarine. Inspired by the glamour of Hollywood, retro jewelry was "larger than life" and showed, for example, big cocktail rings, bracelets, necklaces and watches. The outstanding facts were placed close to lobe and doublets were also very popular at this time. The bracelets also said became popular form of expression.
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