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Speaking of freshwater pearls, a category of inferior pearls
of small size and irregular shape may come into mind. This
may have been the case ten years ago. For many years, China's
freshwater pearl farms only produced low quality "rice"
pearls, whereas seawater pearls were more spherical and of
better quality. Recent years have seen on-going improvements
in the cultivation and processing techniques of Chinese freshwater
pearls. From the 1990s, China surprised the market with products
that are revolutionizing pearling. The ever-inferior freshwater
pearls are now gradually becoming a strong competitor of their
seawater counterparts. The great value of freshwater pearls
over seawater pearls lies in the following 7 aspects:
thickness of nacre coating
A cultured seawater pearl starts with a round-shell nucleus,
which is introduced to the oyster by man. The oyster, over
time, secretes a calcium (nacre), which covers the nucleus.
Generally, in all varieties of seawater pearls, the nacre
coating of Japanese Akoya pearls is the thinnest -- about
a half millimeter thick, the second thin nacre coating is
that of Tahitian pearls-about 2 to 3 millimeters thick.
South Sea pearls develop the thickest-from 2 to 6 millimeters.
In contrast to seawater cultured pearls, freshwater pearls
are all pearl -- this is the biggest selling point to freshwater
pearls. Due to the fact that there is no nucleus inserted
in freshwater pearls, our pearls are all nacre, unlike their
seawater counterparts. Accordingly, the risk of thin nacre
of pearl wearing off over time is not an issue with the freshwater
pearl.
In all seawater pearl varieties, only South Sea pearls can
have a nacre coating as thick as that of freshwater pearls.
But, to have the same thick nacre coating of a 10mm freshwater
pearl (the coating of which is therefore 5mm thick) a South
Sea pearl should be 18mm in size. You will have to spend
a small fortune to have it. On the other hand, it only costs
a small fraction of that money to buy a 10mm, top quality
freshwater pearl.
Colors and Shapes
Colors
Freshwater pearls have a special allure since they are offered
in a wide range of colors-much more variety than seawater
pearls. Thanks to the content of very small quantity of
metal elements, such as copper, silver, natrium and zinc,
the colors of freshwater pearls are very diverse, many of
them unseen in seawater pearls. Some are so rare and unusual
that they are just beyond imagination and expression. These
pearls are no doubt very attractive to jewellery designers.
Shapes
Freshwater pearls can be found in all the shapes possible:
all beautiful in their own right -- round, drop, rice, button,
oval, semi-round, circle or ringed, baroque and semi-baroque.
Some shapes are even very peculiar. Because of its popularity,
the round shape is usually the most expensive, but as always,
personal preference dictates the shape each customer will
find most beautiful. In fact, baroque shape, like the variety
of colors, offers jewellers most scope, although farmers aim
for smooth round cultured pearls.
Longer cultivation period
Generally, South Sea pearls and Tahitian pearls take 2 to
3 years to form. Japanese Akoya pearls take a shorter period,
less than 2 years. The standard cultivation period for Chinese
freshwater pearls in the 1980s was between 1.5 to 2 years.
The relatively short time resulted in small size and low
quality. But in the past 10 years, Chinese pearl farms changed
their way of cultivating pearls and let their implanted
mussels stay in the water for much longer time. Nowadays
Chinese freshwater pearls take from at least 3 years to
as long as 5 to 6 years before they are ready for harvest.
Such a long cultivation period leads to freshwater pearls
that are much bigger in size and much higher in quality;
meanwhile, it is a rigorous test to Chinese pearl farmers'
patience and financial strength.
Comparable sizes
Due to farming technique improvements and longer cultivation
periods, the size of Chinese freshwater pearls is becoming
bigger and bigger. Sizes below 6mm, now regarded as small,
are actually dying out in the market. Large freshwater pearls
in the range of 9 to 16 mm are comparable to South Sea pearls
in size yet more competitive in price. We therefore believe
that this category of pearls shall continue to remain one
of the driving forces in the markets as they have done before.
Comparable quality
The shapes, surface and luster of the new Chinese production
have already surpassed the original Biwa quality. As testimony
to China's achievement, good freshwater pearls are now round
enough, clean and lustrous enough to pass as Japanese Akoya
and South Sea pearls.
Rarity of freshwater pearls
Each year, millions of mussels are implanted. But only a
very small proportion live to bear fine quality cultured
pearls. On average, about fifty percent of the harvest are
not marketable pearls. They are too imperfect, too flawed
to be used as jewels. Less than one percent of those marketable
are of perfect shape, luster and smoothness.
As for those high quality and large size freshwater pearls,
they are of no doubt more rare. They are extremely rare basically
for three important reasons: one is that freshwater pearls
start with a small piece of mantle tissue, not with a much
bigger shell nucleus as seawater pearls do, therefore it takes
exceptionally longer to cultivate large size freshwater pearls.
For example, at least 5 years are needed to make a 10 mm freshwater
pearl. Many farmers who are not financially strong enough
just can't wait so long. The second reason is that even if
you placed an implanted mussel in the water for a long enough
time, you may not anticipate whether its productions will
all be large sizes. For some strange and unknown reasons,
some pearls just refuse to continue growing after several
years' stay in the mussel. Therefore, large sizes always account
for a small part of the harvest no matter how long the cultivation
period is. The third reason still rests in the pearl's long
cultivation period -- any pearl is more likely to become flawed
the longer it is left in the mussel, and so a perfect, large
size freshwater pearl is truly a rare event, blessed by Mother
Nature.
According to the market actuality, we can safely say that
perfect large size freshwater pearls, such as 10 mm freshwater
pearls are much more rare than any same size seawater pearls
of the same quality.
Most competitive price
China has improved its cultivation methods and processing
techniques. These two factors, along with the low labor
costs and vast number of unpolluted lakes in China, have
created a pearl that is much less expensive, yet its upgraded
quality rivals that of the more expensive seawater pearls.
These highly affordable freshwater pearls provide excellent
value, variety and long lasting beauty. Indeed, pearls from
freshwater mussels lie at the center of the liveliest activity
in pearling today.
It is not our nature to bury heads, like ostriches. We clearly
see the fact that the image of freshwater pearls is still
somewhat lower than that of other categories of pearls. Low
quality does occur to seawater pearls. But the inflow to the
market of these lower quality pearls is strictly and successfully
controlled by the seawater pearl industry, preventing them
from destroying the perfect image of the seawater pearl. Freshwater
pearls, on the other hand, have no such control yet. Medium
and low quality products flush over the market, deteriorating
the freshwater pearl's image. But, to conclude that seawater
pearl is superior to freshwater pearl simply by comparing
the best quality seawater pearls on the market with the flood
of low quality freshwater pearls is not fair play. After all,
it is each individual pearl's merits that determines value
more than the source of the pearl. As we have pointed out
many times, freshwater pearls are not just "Rice Krispies",
there are also top quality pearls of high luster and perfectly
round shape. It's a common wish among members of the Chinese
freshwater pearl industry that the image of freshwater pearls
be improved by educating customers and promoting top-quality
pearls.
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