Main Menu

Monday, December 30, 2013

American Fashion Party Jewelry Collection 2014-5

American Fashion Party Jewelry Collection.
By Aamir manan.

Fashion Jewelry .  this is a american fashion jewelry is beautiful style for women  jewelry.  we have it jewelry designs of diamond's he format gold. you have it great choice diamond jewelry in new years. you ere we this jewelry    Fashion Latest designs Bridal Wedding Jewellery Collection 2013 -2014 Jewellery  give for you Designs-2014 15 for Women choice best jewelry By Aamir Manan. 18k gold and silver beautiful fashion jewelry. it is a beautiful jewelry new years gift. your choice jewelry  is great honor for us. and we jewelry  rings and necklace bangles earrings and diamond jewelry for you. and of girls and boys choice new jewelry.  this year we have new bride jewelry maker. ere we diamond and ruby in 18k gold jewelry chose of for. this jewelry the beautiful gift for new year friend  you choice  jewelry. and do you for bride the  beautiful gift so give  
General history[edit]

Costume jewelry has been part of culture for almost 300 years. During the 18th century, jewelers began making pieces with inexpensive glass. In the 19th century, costume jewelry made of semi-precious material came into the market. Jewels made of semi-precious material were more affordable, and this affordability gave common people the chance to own costume jewelry.[3]
But the real golden era for the costume jewelry began in the middle of the 20th century. The new middle class wanted beautiful, but affordable, jewelry. The demand for jewelry of this type coincided with the machine-age and the industrial revolution. The revolution made the production of carefully executed replicas of admired heirloom pieces possible.[1]
As the class structure in America changed, so did measures of real wealth. Women in all social stations, even the working-class woman, could own a small piece of costume jewelry. The average town and country woman could acquire and wear a considerable amount of this mass-produced jewelry that was both
affordable and stylish.[3]


Costume jewelry was also made popular by various designers in the mid-20th century. Some of the most remembered names in costume jewelry include both the high and low priced brands: Crown Trifari, Dior, Chanel, Miriam Haskell, Monet, Napier, Corocraft, Coventry, and Kim Craftsmen.[1][7]

A significant factor in the popularization of costume jewelry was the Hollywood movie. The leading female stars of the 1940s and 1950s often wore and then endorsed the pieces produced by a range of designers. If you admired a necklace worn by Bette Davis in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, you could buy a copy from Joseff of Hollywood, who made the original. Stars such as Vivien Leigh, Elizabeth Taylor and Jane Russell appeared in adverts for the pieces and the availability of the collections in shops such as Woolworth made it possible for ordinary women to own and wear such jewelry.[8]

Coco Chanel greatly popularized the use of faux jewelry in her years as a fashion designer, bringing costume jewelry to life with gold and faux pearls. Kenneth Jay Lane has since the 1960s been known for creating unique pieces for Jackie Onassis, Elizabeth Taylor, Diana Vreeland, and Audrey Hepburn. He is probably best known for his three-strand faux pearl necklace worn by Barbara Bush to her husband's inaugural ball.


In many instances, high-end fashion jewelry has achieved a "collectible" status, and increases in value over time. Today, there is a substantial secondary market for vintage fashion jewelry. The main collecting market is for 'signed pieces', that is pieces which have the maker's mark, usually stamped on the reverse. Amongst the most sought after are Miriam Haskell, Coro, Butler and Wilson, Crown Trifari and Sphinx. However, there is also demand for good quality 'unsigned' pieces, especially if they are of an unusual design.[9]








No comments:

Post a Comment