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Philippines shells fashion label
Philippines shells fashion label Modern Philippines Jewelry reflects important changes in fashions and technology. After World War I (1914-1918), the vogue for short hair for women resulted in the disappearance of formerly popular jeweled combs and hair ornaments. In the same period jeweled vanity cases, wristwatches, and cigarette cases came into style. Strong, lightweight metals such as platinum, iridium, and palladium permitted unconventional settings for gemstones, and new casting methods resulted in more sculptural designs and a greater use of different metallic textures and finishes. As in the Renaissance, painters and sculptors again designed jewels. The works of French painter Georges Braque and American sculptor Alexander Calder combine appropriateness with wearability. Philippines shells fashion label
Philippines shells fashion label Richard L. W. Smith (Smitty) seems to have found the home of Conus pennaceus. He collected ten, and could have had more. All were large ranging up to about 3" and were taken under flat rocks with sand in 2 to 3 feet of water just shoreward of #9 Second Entrance channel marker for Honolulu Harbor. He also came up with a huge Cypraea teres. Philippines shells fashion label
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