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Antiqued Gold

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Antiqued Gold

12 Assorted Antiqued Gold Bookmarks 4 Styles Free Ship 12 Assorted Antiqued Gold Bookmarks 4 Styles Free Ship Paypal US $12.99 22d 11h 5m
5 Mixed styles antiqued gold plate bookmarks W19146 5 Mixed styles antiqued gold plate bookmarks W19146 Paypal 2 Bids US $2.06 19h 16m
Antiqued Silver OWL bird 8cm Metal Bookmark Antiqued Silver OWL bird 8cm Metal Bookmark Paypal US $4.92 7d 7h 18m
Eccolo Romance Heart Italian Leather Refillable Journal 6x8 Eccolo Romance Heart Italian Leather Refillable Journal 6x8 Paypal US $34.95 14d 12h 48m
B523 2Pcs Antiqued Gold plt Crafted ornate bookmark B523 2Pcs Antiqued Gold plt Crafted ornate bookmark Paypal US $2.59 29d 11h 56m
B522 2Pcs Antiqued gold plt butterfly floral bookmark B522 2Pcs Antiqued gold plt butterfly floral bookmark Paypal US $2.59 29d 11h 56m
B521 2Pcs Antiqued gold plt Star Sun bookmark B521 2Pcs Antiqued gold plt Star Sun bookmark Paypal US $2.59 29d 11h 56m
Bookmarker ARMY Veteran Brushed Antique Finish Bookmarker ARMY Veteran Brushed Antique Finish Paypal US $15.85 28d 22h 56m
100pcs Antiqued Gold Crafted Bookmarks R1676 9G 100pcs Antiqued Gold Crafted Bookmarks R1676 9G Paypal US $69.99 27d 11h 50m
Eccolo Lion Crest Refillable Italian Leather Journal 6x8 Eccolo Lion Crest Refillable Italian Leather Journal 6x8 Paypal US $34.95 27d 7m
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Old Dutch International Antique Embossed Standing Paper Towel Holder, 13-Inch Old Dutch International Antique Embossed Standing Paper Towel Holder, 13-Inch

List Price: $21.00
Sale Price: $19.10
You save: $1.90 (9%)

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Description

The antique look of this copper paper towel holder puts it right at home in a kitchen with exposed brick walls and racks of copper pots. A grapevine motif is hand-embossed on the base by skilled artisans specifically for Old Dutch International...

Features

  • 13-inch antique-look paper towel holder
  • Embossed copper over a round wooden base
  • Hand-crafted by skilled artisans
  • 11-inch rod holds standard towel roll; 8-inch rod prevents unrolling
  • Screws included for easy assembly
Mikasa Antique White 45-Piece Dinnerware Set, Service for 8 Mikasa Antique White 45-Piece Dinnerware Set, Service for 8

List Price: $733.50

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Description

HK400-045 Features: -45 Piece dinnerware set.-Uniquely-shaped.-Adding a touch of elegance to a traditional setting.-Coordinates perfectly with both formal and casual stemware and flatware.-Chip resistant...

Features

  • 45-piece dinnerware set, service for 8
  • 5-piece service set and 8 each: 10-inch dinner plate; 8-inch salad plate; 10-inch bowl; 6-1/2-inch saucer; 10-ounce teacup
  • Crafted of fine, chip-resistant china for long-lasting beauty even under rigorous use
  • Pure-white, Colonial-inspired style features scalloped edges and gently raised ridges
  • Safe for use in the dishwasher and microwave
Old Dutch 13¿ Round Antique Embossed Charger Plate Old Dutch 13¿ Round Antique Embossed Charger Plate

Sale Price: $15.95

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Description

Antique embossed copper plate with vine design. 13 in.

Features

  • 13" diameter
  • Hand-crafted by skilled artisans
Rust-Oleum 243898 Designer Metallics Spray, Oil Rubbed Bronze, 11-Ounce Rust-Oleum 243898 Designer Metallics Spray, Oil Rubbed Bronze, 11-Ounce

Sale Price: $5.88

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Description

Rust-Oleum 243898 11 oz Spray Paint, Oil Rubbed Bronze Metallic (6 Pack) Rust-Oleum 243898 11 oz Spray Paint, Oil Rubbed Bronze Metallic (6 Pack) Features: Spray paint Creates a soft, elegant metallic finish Apply to wood, metal, plaster, masonry, ceramic or wicker Durable formula provides lasting luster Fast drying Indoor or outdoor use Durable, corrosion resistant Oil Rubbed Bronze 11 oz

Features

  • Great for ever-popular craft and seasonal decorating
  • Quick, rich look of precious metals
  • Resists chipping and peeling
  • Acrylic formula good on wood, metal, plaster, masonry and unglazed ceramic
  • This item is not for sale in Catalina Island
Rust-Oleum 7274830 Metallic Spray, Antique Brass, 11-Ounce Rust-Oleum 7274830 Metallic Spray, Antique Brass, 11-Ounce

List Price: $11.80
Sale Price: $5.73
You save: $6.07 (51%)

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Description

Rust-Oleum Specialty Metallic Spray provides rich, shiny finish for decorating and accent pieces. Apply to wood, metal, plaster, masonry or unglazed ceramic. Made with real metal leafing flakes. Outdoor use not recommended.

Features

  • Excellent chip resistance and color retention
  • Long lasting protection
  • Fast drying. Dry to touch in 10 minutes
  • No chipping fading or peeling
  • This item is not for sale in Catalina Island
Rust-Oleum 239074 Hammered Metal Finish, Copper, 1-Quart Rust-Oleum 239074 Hammered Metal Finish, Copper, 1-Quart

Sale Price: $14.38

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Description

Now you can paint right over rust to get a distinctive hammered metal appearance with the same great rust-preventative qualities as the Stops Rust finishes. This finish hides flaws and imperfections, requires minimal surface preparation, is ideal for scratched, rusted, and pitted metal...

Features

  • Two coats are necessary
  • No priming needed
  • Dries to the touch in 30 minutes
  • Excellent corrosion resistance
  • This item is not for sale in Catalina Island

The Elegance of Antique Jewelry

The title should in fact be extended further than this: The Elegance of Symbol in Antique Jewelry.

Of all the properties, be it aesthetics or material value, that people, since the dawn of time, have invested in jewelry, the symbol of power is the most important.

Only very few could afford to be adorned with jewelry, so this extravagance is concentrated in upper classes of the civilizations we know. This can be documented from the finds in graves whether they date back to the Bronze Age (2.500 B.C.) or the Middle Ages. Rich graves are better preserved and gold, silver and gems better survive through centuries than leather, wood, textiles, bone, etc. which common people could afford.

All levels of classes are involved in producing jewelry, from the workers in the mines to the jewellers and goldsmiths. We find this to be true whether we talk about the Antiquity or the present.

But also poets, musicians, healers, astronomers, astrologers, painters and philosophers have illustrated the beauty and meaning of gems and jewelry and this narration of culture are shared by all members of society.

These different descriptions and approaches also share the immanent and common purpose that culture invests in meaning: to identify and legitimise power and class differences. Jewelry is always used to signal power, distance, control, prestige, status and place in hierarchy.

Most cultures combine different gems and metals with different level of status, hierarchy, medicine, stars, destiny and the likes.

Symbolic meaning and jewelry also associates power with the beauty, value and magic. Even if each culture intermix and exchange ideas, their cultural representation and different traditions, religion and way of control can be identified through the study of jewelry.

It is the elegance of this symbolic distribution throughout societies, which contribute to the maintenance of hierarchy as culture. As long as all members of a culture love songs and stories about the beauty and bliss of jewelry, they play a role in making symbolic meaning narrated in a meaningful way. Hereby binding together culture, history and hierarchy.

Mountains and gems, find perfection from transparency and beautiful colors. To them belongs the precious stones we so desire: carnelian, jasper, emerald and similar gems. There should be nothing and more beautiful than these”. Plato, Phaedo c. 400 BC.

Plato (427- 347 BC) used precious stones in his dialogue Phaedo to illustrate the future paradise where the soul – freed from the body – exists without disfigurement or disease. He also used gems to illustrate the stars, animals and plants. He believed in his mentor Socrates, when making the use of images of flawless jasper, carnelian and emeralds to render notions of spiritual bliss.

Aristotle (384 – 322 BC) wrote about the power and effect of precious stones and similarly, Theophrastos (370 – 287 BC), a pupil of Aristotle, informed his readers that like Plato, he especially valued emeralds: Some of the stones, for example, jasper and lapis lazuli, are unusual in their appearance, but in addition to its beauty, the emerald most certainly possesses magical powers”.

Antique Jewelry was invested with bliss or magical and healing powers and in the same time they signified status and place in hierarchy. The slave based and stratified societies in the Antique world surely used gold and gems to legitimise dominance, control and exploitation by elegantly referring to the aesthetics and poetic value of gems and workmanship as well as the magical powers embedded in the stones.

The nobles demonstrated status and wealth openly as if it were the most natural thing of the world. In his History of Asia and Europe (c. 130 BC), the Greek historian and geographer Agatharchides of Cnidos writes about the noble residents of Sheba and Gerrha: The furnishings of their houses were made of silver, gold, ivory and precious stones”.

Historical jewelry is thus an interesting subject of study as it helps identifying different cultures and traditions.

The title should in fact be extended further than this: The Elegance of Symbol in Antique Jewelry.

Of all the properties, be it aesthetics or material value, that people, since the dawn of time, have invested in jewelry, the symbol of power is the most important.

Only very few could afford to be adorned with jewelry, so this extravagance is concentrated in upper classes of the civilizations we know. This can be documented from the finds in graves whether they date back to the Bronze Age (2.500 B.C.) or the Middle Ages. Rich graves are better preserved and gold, silver and gems better survive through centuries than leather, wood, textiles, bone, etc. which common people could afford.

All levels of classes are involved in producing jewelry, from the workers in the mines to the jewellers and goldsmiths. We find this to be true whether we talk about the Antiquity or the present.

But also poets, musicians, healers, astronomers, astrologers, painters and philosophers have illustrated the beauty and meaning of gems and jewelry and this narration of culture are shared by all members of society.

These different descriptions and approaches also share the immanent and common purpose that culture invests in meaning: to identify and legitimise power and class differences. Jewelry is always used to signal power, distance, control, prestige, status and place in hierarchy.

Most cultures combine different gems and metals with different level of status, hierarchy, medicine, stars, destiny and the likes.

Symbolic meaning and jewelry also associates power with the beauty, value and magic. Even if each culture intermix and exchange ideas, their cultural representation and different traditions, religion and way of control can be identified through the study of jewelry.

It is the elegance of this symbolic distribution throughout societies, which contribute to the maintenance of hierarchy as culture. As long as all members of a culture love songs and stories about the beauty and bliss of jewelry, they play a role in making symbolic meaning narrated in a meaningful way. Hereby binding together culture, history and hierarchy.

Mountains and gems, find perfection from transparency and beautiful colors. To them belongs the precious stones we so desire: carnelian, jasper, emerald and similar gems. There should be nothing and more beautiful than these”. Plato, Phaedo c. 400 BC.

Plato (427- 347 BC) used precious stones in his dialogue Phaedo to illustrate the future paradise where the soul – freed from the body – exists without disfigurement or disease. He also used gems to illustrate the stars, animals and plants. He believed in his mentor Socrates, when making the use of images of flawless jasper, carnelian and emeralds to render notions of spiritual bliss.

Aristotle (384 – 322 BC) wrote about the power and effect of precious stones and similarly, Theophrastos (370 – 287 BC), a pupil of Aristotle, informed his readers that like Plato, he especially valued emeralds: Some of the stones, for example, jasper and lapis lazuli, are unusual in their appearance, but in addition to its beauty, the emerald most certainly possesses magical powers”.

Antique Jewelry was invested with bliss or magical and healing powers and in the same time they signified status and place in hierarchy. The slave based and stratified societies in the Antique world surely used gold and gems to legitimise dominance, control and exploitation by elegantly referring to the aesthetics and poetic value of gems and workmanship as well as the magical powers embedded in the stones.

The nobles demonstrated status and wealth openly as if it were the most natural thing of the world. In his History of Asia and Europe (c. 130 BC), the Greek historian and geographer Agatharchides of Cnidos writes about the noble residents of Sheba and Gerrha: The furnishings of their houses were made of silver, gold, ivory and precious stones”.

Historical jewelry is thus an interesting subject of study as it helps identifying different cultures and traditions.

About the Author

I webmaster of http://www.museumjewellery.com/default.asp?lang=uk. We deal in all types Jewellery, Historical Jewellery,Antique Jewelry, Antique Necklaces, Antique Pendants, Egyptian jewelry,Viking Jewelry,Russian jewelry,Celtic jewelry,French jewelry, Victorian Jewelry, African jewelry at very affordable price.

i dont know what to do with my new MAC Reflects Antique Gold glitter pigment! any makeup looks?

okay, so i just got it and i dont know what i can do with it, i know its for your eyes, but can someone help me with a look and what stuff to use it with?
Thanks!

you should have asked one of the people that work at MAC! go back and ask. its worth it and they are more than willing to show you.

French Antique Gold Finish Upholstered Cream Arm Chair

The magic of mirrors
If you've recently found yourself reflecting on some of the rooms in your house that need sprucing up, try looking in a mirror -- make that, shopping for mirrors.

Written by admin

November 3rd, 2007 at 2:18 pm

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