The Metropolitan Museum of Art Philippine Pearl Double-Strand Necklace and Linear Drop Earrings Set

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Unique gifts for her. This luminous jewelry evokes a gold-and-pearl rosary made in the 17th-19th-century Philippines and now in The Met collection.Between the 16th and 19th centuries, Spanish missionaries traveled to the Philippines and brought with them, among many other Western traditions, the Catholic rosary: a string of beads used to count repetitions of prayers. These devotional beads assumed various sizes and forms, and continued to evolve until a basic design and sequence of prayers were standardized in the 15th century. In the Philippines, which notably boasts the second largest gold reserves in the world, many rosaries and tamborins-a type of Philippine necklace that combined the European rosary with pre-Hispanic and Asian visual concepts-were made of gold and embellished with beads of coral or pearl. Due to the natural elements in this jewelry, the color of the pearls may vary. Read about the Museum treasure behind this jewelry and shop other art-inspired designs in our blog post

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art Willow Catkins Pearl Brooch The Metropolitan Museum of Art Willow Catkins Pearl Brooch 92.95 USD Our nature-inspired brooch in 18K gold plate displays a row of lustrous freshwater pearls. It celebrates a handsome ceramic vase in The Met collection decorated with a charming motif of willow catkins. Louis C. Tiffany was moved to produce ceramics after seeing examples of French art pottery at the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris. Many of his pottery vases derived their forms from common wildflowers and water plants as seen in their natural habitats-ferns, lilies, cattails, jack-in-the-pulpits, and toadstools. Read our blog post
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Celestial Symbols Carved Mother-of-Pearl Signet Ring - Size 6 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Celestial Symbols Carved Mother-of-Pearl Signet Ring - Size 6 42.95 USD Unique gifts for her. A stained-glass roundel (1390) at The Met Cloisters lends its celestial motifs to this eye-catching ring. The original was crafted in a large court workshop in Niederösterreich, Austria, and installed in the castle at Ebreichsdorf near the Hungarian border. Having withstood attacks by the Mongols in the 13th century, followed by the Turks in the 17th century, the castle never returned to its medieval splendor; with the exception of a surviving panel in Vienna, this roundel and a series of narrative panels depicting the life of Christ, formerly displayed in the Gothic Chapel at Ebreichsdorf and now at The Cloisters, are all that remain of the structure's magnificent glasswork.
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