Galatea
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By far the most outstanding addition to the gem
world was premiered at JCK Las Vegas 2007. Chi Huynh of Galatea
(Jewelry by Artist), located in San Dimas, California, is best
known for his Diamond in a Pearl, in addition to his carved Akoya
and Tahitian pearls. This year, Chi introduced carved black pearls,
exposing the pearl's nucleus. The surprise is that the nucleus is
NOT Mother-of-Pearl. Several years ago, while Chi was carving a
Tahitian pearl, he accidentally carved too deeply, exposing the
white Mother-of-Pearl bead beneath the black nacre. Lamenting over
the fact that he had just ruined a perfectly fine Tahitian pearl, he
suddenly got this idea that he could insert gemstone beads into a
black lipped oyster, creating a pearl that would be carved down to
the nucleus, exposing the gem beneath the nacre.
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Specials |
Davinchi |
Diamond in
a Pearl |
Mercy
Pearl |
Mother of
Pearl |
Season of
Love |
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Chi took that idea to Tahitian pearl farmers who
told him that this kind of pearl could not be grown in the French
Polynesian Islands. Undaunted by this turn of events, he took the
black lipped oyster to waters off the shores of Vietnam. After
persuading experts in implantation that his idea could actually
work, he attempted to grow black pearls using citrine, amethyst, and
turquoise bead nuclei. Three years later, Chi harvested beautiful
AAA quality Tahitian-like (now Vietnamese) black pearls. While it
was always his intent to carve these pearls down to expose the
gemstone nucleus, he started to question his sanity of carving these
beautiful pearls. But carve them he did, and the transformation is
remarkable. Carved black pearl nacre over citrine, amethyst, and
turquoise nuclei. Galatea has stunned the pearl world!
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