MABE' (Or Mobe')
A Japanese term for cultured pearls which are cultured against the
shell so that only half a pearl is formed resembling a half-sphere.
Mabe Pearl
Mabe pearls are large, hemispherical cultured pearls that grow
attached to the inside shells of oysters. Mabe pearls are used
in earrings, pins, and rings.
Machine Stamping
Machine stamping (also known as die-stamping) is a process in
which sheet metal is cut and shaped between two dies, forming
a pattern in relief. Two steel dies are used, the male die has
the design in cameo (protruding); the female die has the design
hollowed out. The male die is put on top of the metal, the female
die is put on the underside of the metal. The press is forcefully
brought down onto the dies and metal, forcing the metal into the
shape of the mold. Many medallions and mass-produced jewelry findings
are made this way.
Magnesia
Also called periclase, magnesia is a light, solid, white earthy
mineral composed of magnesium oxide. It is a source of magnesium
and is used as a laxative. It takes its name from Magnesia, an
ancient city of Asia Minor, and is a mineral ingredient of the
philosophers' stone.
Magnesium
A light, silvery-white, moderately hard, malleable, ductile, metallic
element which only occurs in nature as a compound with other elements,
as found in magnesite, spinel and olivine. In ribbon or powder
form magnesium burns with a brilliant white flame, (the so-called
magnesium light), which is used in signaling, pyrotechnics, incendiary
bombs, or in photography where a strong actinic illuminant is
required.
Mahogany Obsidian
Mahogany Obsidian (also called Apache tears) is brownish obsidian.
This glassy, lustrous mineral is found in lava flows, and obsidian
stones can be massive. Obsidian is formed when viscous lava (from
volcanos) cools rapidly. Most obsidian is 70 percent silica. Obsidian
has a hardness of 5 and a specific gravity of 2.35. The pin above
is Mahogany (brown) obsidian.
Malachite
Malachite is an opaque semi-precious stone with layers of deep
green and light green. It is usually found in copper mines; malachite
is about 57% copper. Malachite was used as jewelry thousands of
years ago by the ancients Egyptians. Malachite is usually cabochon
set in silver. Russian malachite carvings were done in miniature
and in large scale; malachite was also inlaid in furniture. Malachite
has a hardness of 4 and a specific gravity of 3.80. It is monoclinic;
it has one two-fold axis of symmetry. Malachite is sometimes coated
with colorless wax, oil, or hardening agents to increase its durability
and enhance its appearance.
Malleable
Malleable metals are easily worked with a hammer or a roller.
gold and sterling silver are very malleable metals.
Maltese Cross
Maltese cross is a cross whose four equal-length arms get larger
the farther they get from the center. The Maltese cross brooch
above is by Weiss; it has red paste stones and a Japanned finish.
Mandrel
A mandrel is a metal rod used to coil molten glass in order to
make a bead.
Manganese
A gray-white or silvery brittle, metallic, element which resembles
iron but is not magnetic. It is found abundantly in the ores pyrolusite,
manganite, and rhodochrosite and in nodules on the ocean floor.
Manganese is alloyed with iron to form ferromanganese, which is
used to increase strength, hardness, and wear resistance of steel.
Manganite
Steel-gray or iron-black crystals composed of manganese oxide.
Used as a source of manganese.
Mabble
A metamorphic rock composed of calcium carbonate, (like aragonite
or coral), or carbonate of lime, (limestone or dolomite, a variety
of calcite), which is swirled or clouded with color. It is most
often used for architectural and ornamental purposes. The most
common variety is white, but it can also be yellow, red, or green.
Marbled
A stone, or other object, with two or more colors swirled together.
Marboux
Marboux is a mark of the Marcel Boucher costume jewelry company.
Other Boucher marks include "Marcel Boucher" and "Boucher."
Marcasite
Marcasite is a shiny, metallic semi-precious stone. It is actually
iron pyrite. Marcasite is generally faceted. The Czech guilloche
pin above is studded with marcasites.
Marina chain
A chain composed of small, round, diamond cut links that are designed
to lie flat like a curb link chain, but are set very close together.
Mariner Link
A chain link resembling a flat oval with a flat bar
in the middle of the ring. A figogucci chain is a variant form.
Marquise
Marquise cut stones have a shape like an oval with two pointed
ends.
Marvella
Marvella is a costume jewelry brand that was founded by Sol E.
Weinreich, who began business in January, 1906 in New York, New
York. They were bought by Trifari in 1982. It is now owned by
the Monet Group, Inc. This company has been called the Weirich
Brothers Company, Marvella, Inc., and Marvella Pearls, Inc. Marvella
created costume jewelry, many featuring simulated pearls and faceted
beads. For more information on Marvella, click here.
Matinee-Length
A matinee-length necklace is a single strand that is from 22 to
23 inches (56 to 58 cm) long. Matinee-length generally refers
to a string of pearls that hangs to the top of the cleavage.
Matisse
Matisse is a line of enameled copper jewelry from the "Renoir
of California" jewelry company. The enameled copper leaf
pin above is marked Matisse.
Matte
With jewelry which has a matte finish the designer uses either
a chemical process or an abrasive material to scratch the top
layers of the piece creating a dull and non-reflective surface.
Also referred to as having a "brushed finish.".
Matte Finish
A matte finish on a metal's surface is a soft, lustrous finish
that reduces the metal's reflectivity.
Maw-Sit-Sit
Maw-sit-sit is a rare green gemstone that has dark-green to black
veining; it sometimes has white spots. The stone is opaque to
translucent. Maw-sit-sit has a hardness of 6.0; the specific gravity
is 2.5 to 3.5. This stone is found in Maw-sit-sit, Myanmar (Burma),
and is often found neat jadeite, but maw-sit-sit is not a type
of jade. Maw-sit-sit was first identified in 1963 by the Swiss
Gemologist Eduard Gübelin; the local called the stone maw-sit-sit,
and the name was retained. Although its exact composition is still
unknown, Maw-sit-sit is composed of chromite, ureyite, chrome
jadeite, symplektite, chrome amphibole, and other lighter minerals.
Mazer
(Mazer (or Jomaz) is a costume jewelry mark used by the Joseph
J. Mazer company (founded in NY, NY in 1927). Early pieces are
marked "Mazer Bros;" later pieces are marked JOMAZ or
MAZER. They went out of business in 1970's. Mazer made high-quality
jewelry like the gold-plated earring above with pearl and paste
accents.
McClelland Barclay
McClelland Barclay was a costume jewelry company that made very
high quality pieces, often gold plated with colored rhinestones
and a geometric design. He also made jewelry pieces in sterling
silver and trays in anodized aluminum and bronze. McClelland Barclay
(1891-1943) was an artist who was an illustrator, sculptor, painter,
and jewelry designer. McClelland Barclay jewelry is not the same
as Barclay.
Melanite
A common black variety of garnet composed of iron lime.
Melee
A melee is a small diamond, under .20 carat.
Memory Wire
Memory wire is a tough, stiff wire that retains its shape. It
is often used for necklaces and bracelets.
Mesh
A sheet of fabric-like woven fine wire, similar to the kind used
for screen doors.
Metallic
The quality used to describe a gem with a luster similar to metal.
Hematite, pyrite, stibnite, silver topaz and Gibeon Meteorites
are some gems which display a metallic luster.
Mexican Diamond
Mexican diamond is a misleading term for rock crystal, and not
a diamond at all.
Mexican Jade
Mexican jade is a misleading term for dyed stalagmitic calcite;
it is not jade.
Mifa
MFA stands for the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusett,
USA. They produce reproductions of their museum pieces (and other
jewelry pieces).
Mica
Mica is a soft, lightweight, transparent mineral that cleaves
into thin, elastic sheets (it has a single perfect cleavage direction).
It is used for lampshades and electrical insulators. There are
about 30 different types of micas, ranging in color from yellow
to green to gray to violet to white to brown. Mica has a hardness
of 2.5 and a specific density of about 3. Tiny mica particles
give the shimmer to aventurine (goldstone).
Microcrystalline
Microcrystalline is a type of mineral structure in which the crystals
are so small that they can only be seen using a microscope.
Micromosaics
Micromosaics are pictures or decorations that are made out of
extremely small pieces (tiles) of stone, glass or other materials.
Italian micromosaics were common souvenirs. Older examples are
much more intricate, have smaller mosaic tiles, and generally
have better workmanship.
Micron
A micron is a unit of length equal to 0.001 mm (millimeter).
Milanese Mesh
Milanese mesh (also known as Milanese work or Milanese chain)
is a an intricate mesh made from spiral wires braided together.
Milanese mesh is used to make necklaces and bracelets.
Milgrain
A raised, beaded edge on a ring done with a special engraver's
tool; resembling the edge of a coin.
Milgrain Setting
A milgrain design engraved into the edge of the metal securing
a stone in place.
Milk And Honey Fffect
The milk and honey effect is one in which the apparent coloring
of a stone changes (from milky to the color of honey) as the angle
of the light changes. When a light is shined on the stone, one
side of the stone is the color of milk and the other is the color
of honey. When the light changes direction, the color effect also
shifts. Cat's-eye chrysoberyl can exhibit this milk and honey
phenomenon.
Millefiori
Millefiori (meaning "thousand flowers" in Italian) is
glass that is formed from multiple canes of colored glass that
are fused together and cut crosswise. Millefiori glass can also
be made into beads.
Millegrain
A millegrain (or millegrain setting) is a setting in
which the stone is secured by tiny beads [grains] of metal or
a band of metal that is decorated with tiny beads of metal.
Milling
Milling is a process in which wood or metal is cut while it either
the material or the tool is spinning. Symmetrical shapes and patterns
are cut into the material.
Mine Cut
Mine cut stones have a cushion-shaped girdle. This type of cut
was popular in the late 1800's.
Mineral
Any inorganic substance; i.e. anything that is not a plant or
an animal.
Mineral Crystal
see Quartz.
Ming's
Ming's of Honolulu (Hawaii) was a fine jewelry company that sold
high-quality jewelry (both gold and silver), often using pearls,
jade, coral, and ivory (often dyed). The designs often used Hawaiian
and Asian motifs. Ming's also produced hand-carved figurals depicting
exotic leaves (like banana leaves), flowers (like hibiscus, anthurium,
pikake, bird of paradise, and orchids) and other natural objects.
Some older, unmarked Ming's pieces have a distinctive leaf-shaped
clasp. The artist Wook Moon began Ming's in 1940 and the store
soon expanded over the Hawaii islands, and to San Francisco, New
York City, Miami, Houston, Ft. Lauderdale, and Atlanta. The last
of the Ming's stores (in Honolulu) closed in October, 1999.
Miracle
Miracle makes Celtic or "Scottish" jewelry, jewelry
using ancient Celtic designs and stones such as agate. The Miracle
pin pictured above is made with agate stones.
Mint Condition
A piece of jewelry having no signs of wear whatsoever, including
no discolored stones. A piece that is in Mint Condition is in
virtually the same condition as it was when it left the manufacturer.
Considering that vintage jewelry is usually 50 or more years old,
and that it likely has been worn, it is obviously quite rare to
find a piece that is truly in Mint Condition.
Mixed Cut
A mixed cut in one in which the style of the facets above and
below the girdle are different. A standard mixed cut is brilliant
cut above and step cut below.
Mogul Emerald
These Indian emeralds were owned by Indian moguls (like Shah Jahan,
the builder of the Taj Mahal) and were inscribed with sacred blessings.
Mohs Scale
The Mohs Scale of Hardness measures a substance's hardness, that
is, how resistant it is to being scratched. In the Mohs scale,
which ranges from 1 to 10, one substance is harder than another
if it can scratch it. For example, a diamond (hardness = 10) will
scratch garnet (hardness = 6.5-7.5), but not the other way around,
so a diamond is harder than garnet. This scale was invented by
Austrian mineralogist Friedrich Mohs (1773-1839).
Moini, Iradj
Iradj Moini is a modern jewelry designer who produces exquisite,
imaginative, handmade pieces. Moini's jewelry is highly collectible
and is usually figural and studded with brightly-colored stones.
Moini designs for Oscar de la Renta, but he has also produced
pieces for Bill Blass, Scaas and Herrera.
Moissanite
Moissanite is a very hard mineral that was discovered by Dr. Ferdinand
Henri Moissan (1852-1907), a French chemist and Nobel Prize winner
(Moissan did work on synthesizing diamonds and discovered carborundum
in 1891). He found tiny amounts of Moissanite in the iron meteorite
that was found at Diablo Canyon (also called Meteor Crater) in
Arizona, USA. Moissanite ranges in color from colorless to blue
to green to yellow. Its chemical makeup is Silicon Carbide (SiC);
it is also called Carborundum. Moisannite crystals are transparent
to translucent. Moissanite has a hardness of 9.25 (this is almost
as hard as diamond) and a specific gravity of 3.1 - 3.2. Laboratory-grown
Moissanite is sold as a gemstone.
Mokume-Gane
A Japanese metal-smithing technique which results in a wood-like
finish. Alternating layers of thin, colored metals are laminated
together. Patterns are punched in the laminate, filed away or
hammered. This technique produces unique and delicate patterns.
Moldavite
Moldavite is a rare, glassy, translucent, dark green gemstone.
Moldavite is a silica-based tektite, a mineral formed when a meteorite
(a rock from space) struck the Earth's surface and melted and
fused the surrounding rock. Moldavite is only found in Bohemia
(the Czech Republic) in the Ries Crater in the Moldau River valley
(which it was named for). Moldavite was discovered in the late
1800's; the meteorite from which it formed hit the Earth about
14.7 million years ago. Moldavite has a hardness of 5.5-6.6. Inclusions
of gas bubbles and iron/nickel spherules are common. This natural
glass has been used for jewelry, religious articles, and decorative
objects since prehistoric times.
Molded Cameos
Molded cameos are cameos that are made by the molding process
and not by carving the material (as traditional cameos are). Molded
cameos are usually made from plastic, glass, or porcelain that
is formed in a mold. Often, two colors of material are used, one
for the relief pattern (often depicting a person or scene) and
another for the background. The molded cameo above is a Jasper
ware porcelain cameo made by the Wedgewood Company.
Mollusk
An invertebrate animal usually enclosed in a shell, such as an
oyster, mussel or clam.
MOMA
MOMA stands for the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, New
York, USA. They produce reproductions of their museum pieces (and
other jewelry pieces).
Monet
Monet is a major, high-quality costume jewelry manufacturer. It
was founded as the Monocraft Products Company in 1927 by Jay and
Michael Chernow as a monogram manufacturer and began producing
jewelry under the name Monet in 1929. The mark "Monet"
was begun in September, 1937. Monet produced Yves Saint Laurent
jewelry in the 1980's. Monet developed the very comfortable "friction
ear clip" for non-pierced earrings and the "barrel clutch"
for pierced earrings. This company has been sold many times (its
owners have included General Mills and Crystal Brands Jewelry)
and is now called the Monet Group, Inc.; it is still located in
East Providence, Rhode Island. The Monet Group now distributes
jewelry under the names Monet, Trifari, Ciani, and Marvella.
Monoclinic
Monoclinic minerals have a crystalline structure in which there
is one two-fold axis of symmetry. Jade, Malachite and moonstone
are monoclinic.
Montana Ruby
A "Montana ruby" is actually a pyrope garnet (and not
a ruby at all).
Moonstone
Moonstone (orthoclase) is a semi-translucent stone that is made
of albite and orthoclase feldspar. It is usually whitish-blue,
but can be colorless, yellow, orange, gray, or even reddish. Moonstone
is usually set as a cabochon. Moonstone was very popular early
in the 20th century and was extensively used in Art Nouveau jewelry.
Moonstone has a hardness of 6 and a specific gravity of 2.57.
It is monoclinic; it has one two-fold axis of symmetry. Adularia
is a common type of moonstone. Oligoclase is another type of moonstone;
Labradorite and albite are rare forms.
Morganite
A transparent to translucent pink gemstone. It is a variety of
beryl, Be3Al2(Si6O18) that contains some manganese (giving the
stone its pink color). Morganite has a hardness of 7.5 - 8 and
a specific gravity of 2.71 - 2.90. It has poor cleavage and is
brittle. Morganite is often heat treated to give the stone a purer
pink color (and remove any yellow spots). Morganite was named
for J. Pierpoint Morgan, the American industrialist and gem collector.
Morganite is found in Brazil, Madagascar, Italy, Pakistan, Mozambique,
Namibia, Zimbabwe, and the USA (California, Maine, Connecticut,
and North Carolina).
Morse
A clasp used by the clergy for fastening garments, such as a cape,
in front. It is usually very large, from 12.5 to 17.5 cm in diameter,
of various materials and shapes, and decorated in religious themes.
Mosaics
Mosaics are pictures or decorations that are made out of small
pieces (tiles) of stone, glass or other materials. Italian mosaics
were common souvenirs. Older examples are much more intricate,
have smaller mosaic tiles, and generally have better workmanship.
Moss Agate
Moss agate (also called Mocha stone in Britain and the USA) is
a green variety of agate. It is chalcedony that has dendritic
(tree-like) inclusions of green (red or black) hornblende. The
inclusions often form beautiful patterns. Moss agate has a hardness
of 6.5-7 and a specific gravity of 2.6. Green moss agate is found
in India, and some other locations.
Mother-Of-Pearl
Mother-of-pearl is the iridescent coating on the inside of oyster
shells. Mother-of-pearl is used for jewelry, buttons, and other
uses.
Mother's Rings
A kind of "family jewelry", Mother's rings are rings
personalized with their children's birthstones or with birthstones
and names.
Moukaite
Moukaite is a semi-precious gemstone, a variety of jasper from
Australia. The color of moukaite varies from red-browns to pinks,
with gold and white bands.
Mount
To place or fix a stone in the setting. See Mounting.
Mounting
A piece of metal that holds a gem in place.
Mourning Jewelry
Mourning jewelry is a type of jewelry worn when one is mourning
the loss of a loved one. It is often black, subdued jewelry (often
made of jet or black glass and metal with a Japanned finish) or
jewelry that commemorates the dead (like hair jewelry or cameos).
After England's Queen Victoria's beloved husband (and cousin)
Albert died (in 1861), she went into an extended period of mourning.
During these years, she wore black clothing and mourning jewelry.
English fashion was greatly influenced by this, and mourning jewelry,
especially jet, became quite fashionable.
Muff Chain
A long chain with a clasp used to suspend a lady’s fur muff.
Mya Yay
Mya yay is the Burmese (Myanmar) name for the highest quality
translucent jadeite.
Mystic Fire
Mystic fire (also called mystic topaz or rainbow topaz) is topaz
that has been color enhanced by coating it with a fine layer of
metal atoms (in a process called vacuum deposition). This stone
has red, green, violet, and blue streaks. Mystic fire has a hardness
of 8.

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