Understanding This Piece
About Pearl
Pearls are the only major gemstones produced by living organisms — formed when a mollusk coats an irritant with layers of nacre over months or years. Modern fine-jewelry pearls are typically Akoya (Japan, classic round), South Sea (Australia, large with golden or silver tones), or Tahitian (French Polynesia, dark with peacock overtones). Pearls score just 2.5–4.5 on Mohs and require gentle care: wipe with a damp cloth after wearing, store separately from harder jewelry, and avoid contact with perfume, hairspray, and chlorine. Pearl is the June birthstone and 30th-anniversary gem.
About Platinum
Platinum is naturally white, hypoallergenic, and the densest precious metal used in fine jewelry — typically 95% pure (versus gold's 58.3% for 14K or 75% for 18K). It holds diamonds more securely than any gold alloy, never tarnishes, and develops a soft patina over years of wear that many buyers prize. Platinum costs roughly 1.5–2x equivalent 14K white gold but eliminates the rhodium-replating cycle and carries the strongest long-term durability of any setting metal. It is the standard for premium engagement rings and eternity bands.
About Pendant Necklaces
A pendant necklace consists of a chain (the carrier) and a pendant (the focal piece that hangs from it). The pendant typically attaches via a bail — a small metal loop that allows it to slide along the chain. The most popular pendant categories are diamond solitaires, gemstone-set pendants, symbolic motifs (heart, cross, infinity, initial), and lockets. The chain should be matched in metal and weight to the pendant — a substantial pendant pulls against a thin chain over time, so we pair every pendant with an appropriately weighted chain at point of sale.