Featured Two necklace mysteries- can you tell what these materials are?

Discussion in 'Jewelry' started by Marko, Sep 1, 2019.

  1. Kathy Anderson

    Kathy Anderson Well-Known Member

    Oh, no! Did you find them all?
     
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  2. Kathy Anderson

    Kathy Anderson Well-Known Member

    Sweeeet! Venetian, right?
     
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  3. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    Yep!
     
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  4. Marko

    Marko Well-Known Member

    I would have crawled through fire for those Venetian beads. I usually don't see rhinestone rondelles on original Venetian beading, I thought the rebeader added them. She did a nice job.

    I have never had wire chain break on me, but I can't tell you how many times I have had old thread give out. I remember picking up a rainbow/iris glass double strand faceted necklace, only $25 in my antique mall, and the string gave out. They glared at me, but it wasn't my fault the string was dry rotted and couldn't hold the beads. I played 52 pickup then because I was getting every single one of those beads they don't produce anymore. I picked up an old mother of pearl strand, very heavy, should have bought it, and the string broke. The seller was understanding.

    I went to Wal-mart to get Simichrome, but the guy was too busy playing on his cell phone to help me except to say he never heard of it. I looked all over, gave up, and ordered it from Amazon Prime. I will keep you posted.
     
  5. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    Yeah, I don't know who did the "original" stringing.

    But I think they used up ALL their supplies. :joyful:
     
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  6. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    What is it strung on now? I don't often like wedding cake beads, but the muted colors of these are eye pleasing. Eclectic is the word you're looking for. :)
     
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  7. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    Some kind of very fine twisted cable wire coated in plastic.

    Or that's my best recollection (they were re-strung 30+years ago) and after looking without my magnifying glasses. :bucktooth::bored:

    I think these are the only fiorato I ever bought. Of course, when you have this many in one piece, why would you need more? :joyful:

    And yes, I refuse to call them "wedding cake beads" -- I don't know where that name came from and I hate it. There is no rationale behind my hatred and I'm usually loosey-goosey with new names/changing language/non-traditional.

    But not on this one. :stop::bag::hilarious:
     
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  8. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    That coated wire is a standard beading material if you want strength & aren't going to knot. A quick & easy way to string. I have always assumed 'wedding cake' for the look of fancy icing.
     
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  9. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    I assume so, too. And romance.

    To me, they're more "birthday cake" than "wedding cake"...

    I think "wedding cake" feels like marketing to me. :jawdrop:
     
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  10. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    Suppose what you perceive is influenced by the cakeways of your culture. :)
     
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  11. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    Fair enough.

    Still can't make me say it. :jawdrop::joyful:
     
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  12. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I never knew the original name. I'd have knotted the beads onto waxed linen, the way they should have been done in the first place. I have a hunch those were strung in the States; no Venetian worth his salt would have just strung them on cotton. They'd have been knotted.
     
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  13. Jivvy

    Jivvy the research is my favorite

    They were never strung on cotton, they were on a very lovely and very delicate chain.

    So, should not have been a huge surprise when it broke. :joyful:

    I don't know where it was strung, but small bead as separator (as opposed to knots) was not uncommon.

    I have wondered about the hand-faceted beads -- on any other necklace, I would have guessed Czech.

    But the fiorato/i(?) are textbook Venetian (for the period -- which I think is late 1950s/early 60s).

    For all I know, could be beads with a mix of origins and strung in Rivendell. ;)
     
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  14. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    The latter is my best guess. I've redone some of those Venetian necklaces when the original cording has gotten damaged. A lot of the flower beads were probably exported as was and restrung however. I'm not fond of "however". The twisted wire cording is a little stiff but doesn't go anywhere.
     
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  15. Marie Forjan

    Marie Forjan Well-Known Member

    @Marko did the beads test as Bakelite?
     
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  16. anundverkaufen

    anundverkaufen Bird Feeder

    Or maybe faturan, eh?
     
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  17. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Faturan, another one of the forum's rabbit holes.:facepalm: Ok, I'll bite.:playful: Does it smell of incense?
     
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  18. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

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