Safety
Catch: One of several means
of securing a
brooch to a garment. Before the
invention of safety catches, the
most common means of securing a
brooch was a simple
"C" catch with no locking
mechanism. A safety catch is simply
a way to secure the
pin to the
"C" catch so that it doesn't
come undone and does not need to
extend beyond the edge of the
brooch.
Salt: A
colorless or white
crystalline solid, composed of
Sodium
chloride. It is found native in
the earth, and is also produced by
the evaporation and
crystallization of sea water and
other water impregnated with saline
particles. Salt is used extensively
in ground or granulated form as a
food seasoning and preservative.
San
Marco chain: A unique kind
of
chain wherein each link is long
and rounded, resembling a puffed
grain of rice with a flat bottom.
The
links are arranged next to each
other at a 45 degree angle and
attached to each other on the bottom
by sturdy flat pins set at an
opposite angle.
Sand
Casting: For hundreds of
years sand casting was the most
popular of all casting methods. It
still plays an important role in the
production of large
metal forms, (typically
Iron, but also
Bronze,
Brass,
Aluminum). Tempered sand is
packed onto wood or
metal pattern halves, removed
from the pattern, and
metal is poured into resultant
cavities. Molds are broken to remove
castings.
Sandstone:
Just as the name implies,
sandstone is a
Sedimentary
stone made of sand that has been
fused with some cementing element
like clay or
quartz.
Sapphire:
One of the four
precious
gemstones. The other three are
diamonds,
rubies, and
emeralds. Sapphire is a member
of the
corundum family which come in a
variety of colors from white to
orange to green to pink. If a
corundum
gemstone is red, it is a
ruby, but any other color are
properly referred to as sapphires.
Sapphires have been
synthesized
since the 1920's. Ancient Persians
believed the blueness of the sky was
caused by the reflection from an
enormous blue sapphire that the
Earth rested on. Blue sapphire is
the
birthstone for September.
Sard: A
deep orange-red to brownish-red
variety of
chalcedony.
Sardonyx:
A variety of
onyx consisting of alternating
layers of Sard
and white
chalcedony.
Satin
finish: A series of tiny
parallel lines scratched onto a
surface with a wire brush or
polishing tool to produce texture
Saturation: A measure of the
intensity of
color inherent in a
gemstone. Stones that are well
saturated with
color are more valuable.
Sautoir:
(Soh-TWAH) A long rope style
necklace popularized in the
Edwardian era because Queen
Alexandra often wore them. They were
usually decorated with
seed pearls and
had a
tassel as a
pendant.
Scalenohedral: A
fancy shape
gemstone made up of 12
facets, each shaped like a
scalene triangle. Crystal points
with triangular
facets are said to be
scalenohedral.
Scalloped: An ornamental
border consisting of a series of
curved projections.
Scarab:
An ancient Egyptian fertility symbol
based on a common dung beetle found
in Egypt. It was often carried as an
amulet cast from
gold or carved from
Semiprecious
stones. The flat underside could
have a design carved into it that
could be used as a
Signet.
Scatter
Pin: A small
pin, usually featuring flowers,
birds and insects, that is intended
to be worn in a group with many
other scatter pins.
Scepter:
A symbol of spiritual and worldly
power used as a part of royal
insignia. A scepter is really
nothing more than a simple staff,
but the ones used in ceremony are
usually highly decorated with
precious
metals and
gemstones. The topping of a
scepter varied in different
countries and in different periods.
In the Middle Ages two forms were
distinguished: a long staff (baculum),
otherwise called rod, and a short
one (sceptrum), although their
meaning was identical. The long
staff, topped with a globe, is a
typical attribute of God in
Carolingian painting. A scepter
could be crowned with three leaves
or a lily, a globe, a bird, etc.
Schorl:
Black
Tourmaline.
Scintillation: See
Sparkle.
Scoria: A volcanic
stone that has cooled very quickly
and being full of bubbles, it has a
frothy appearance.
Screw
back: A type of
earring attachment for non-pierced
ears where the
earring is tightened against the
earlobe by means of a screw with a
flat padded end.
Scrimshaw:
A type of folk art dating from
at least the 17th century in which
whale teeth, whale bones and walrus
tusks are engraved or lightly carved
with a picture or design. It was a
way for sailors on long whaling
voyages to pass time but has become
very collectible.
Seashell:
Any of a number of shells of
marine creatures such as
mollusks or gastropods which can
be used as
jewelry. See
cowrie shell,
olivelia shell,
abalone,
ammolite, etc.
Sedimentary: Rock formed by
layers of material that has
accumulated and hardened over time.
Seed bead:
(also seed-bead, seedbead). Mass
produced tiny glass or plastic
beads made by slicing tubes into
tiny evenly spaced pieces. This
makes them oblong in shape, rather
than round, and flat on the ends.
Seed
beads can be strung together to
make a
necklace or
bracelet, but are commonly used
as spacers for larger
beads. They can also be strung
on a loom to make beaded bands and
belts.
Seed
Pearl: A very small
pearl or imitation
pearl popular during the
Victorian period as accents set
into
gold
jewelry or woven into long
fringed
necklaces called
sautoirs.
Semi-Mount/Semi-Mounting: A
finished piece of
jewelry already embellished with
gemstones and/or
engraving that is simply waiting
for the center stone. Pieces are
sold this way to allow the buyer to
add a center stone of their own
choosing.
Semiprecious: Any
gemstones valued for their
beauty but which are not one of the
four "precious
stones", (emerald,
diamond,
ruby or
Sapphire). Some examples of
semiprecious stones are
amethyst,
aventurine,
carnelian,
garnet,
opal,
peridot,
rose quartz, etc.
Serpentine chain: A series
of small, flat, s-shaped
links set very closely together
and held in place by a second set of
small, flat, s-shaped
links set very closely together
underneath them.
Setting:
The part of the
jewelry into which stones are
set. Also refers to the mechanism
used to hold the stones in place,
such as the
bezel,
pave',
channel, and
prong settings.
Shakudo: a Japanese metal
alloy composed of copper and gold.
Shank:
The part of a
ring that encircles the finger,
does not include the
Setting.
Shoulder:
The part of a
ring between the
Shank and the
center of the
Setting.
Shekel:
A Hebrew unit equal to about a
half ounce. A common estimate makes
the shekel equal in weight to about
130 grains for
gold, 224 grains for
Silver, and
450 grains for
copper. A shekel is also a
gold or
Silver
coin equal in weight to one of these
units, especially the chief
Silver coin of
the ancient Hebrews. The approximate
values of the coins are (gold)
$5.00, (Silver)
60 cents, and (copper
half shekel), one and one half
cents.
Shibuichi: A
Japanese metal alloy composed of
copper and silver.
Signet:
A carved design, like an
intaglio, which was usually worn
on a
ring. It was pressed into soft
wax to authenticate a document. The
design was usually a coat of arms,
family crest, or some other type of
insignia or monogram unique to the
person using it.
Silica:
Crystalline silica is the
scientific name for a group of
minerals composed of silicon and
oxygen. The term crystalline refers
to the fact that the oxygen and
silicon atoms are arranged in a
three-dimensional repeating pattern.
Silicate:
Any of a large group of
minerals, forming over 90
percent of the earth's crust, that
consist of
Silicon,
oxygen, and one or more
metals, (and sometimes
hydrogen).
Silicon:
A
nonmetallic
element which is only found as a
compound with other
elements in nature. When
artificially extracted, silicon
appears as a dark brown amorphous
powder, or as a dark
crystalline substance with a
metallic
luster. This substance is used
in combination with other materials
in glass, semiconducting devices,
concrete, brick, refractories,
pottery, and silicones. Its
oxide is
Silica, or common
quartz, and in this form, or as
silicates,
it is the second most abundant
element in the Earth's crust,
next to
oxygen, making up 25.7% of it by
weight.
Singapore chain: A style of
chain wherein each link is
composed of a series of flat,
diamond-cut, interwoven
concentric loops.
Single-cut Diamonds: Genuine
diamonds, commonly used in
watchcases, that contain only 18
facets.
Silver:
One of the three "precious
metals" along with
gold and
platinum which has been used to
make
jewelry for thousands of years.
Silver has a
lustrous white color but needs
polishing occasionally because
silver reacts with
Sulfur in the air to cause
tarnishing. It is harder than
gold and much more plentiful,
but still too soft in its natural
state to be of much use as
jewelry without being
alloyed with a harder
metal. (see
Sterling Silver). Silver has the
highest thermal and electrical
conductivity of the
metals and is widely used in
coinage, photography, dental and
soldering
alloys, electrical contacts, and
printed circuits.
During
the 18th and 19th century most of
the worlds coins were struck of
copper, bronze, gold or
silver.
Silver
tone:
Jewelry finished with a silver
color with very little appreciable
measurement of weight in
Silver.
Silvery finish:
Jewelry that has the look of
silver but no actual
Silver
content.
Simulated stones: Any
natural or
Synthetic substance which is
meant to resemble a
gemstone.
cubic zirconia, for example, is
a simulated
diamond.
Simulated tortoise: A
Synthetic
material resembling the mottled
brown and yellow color found on
tortoise shells.
Slate:
A smooth, solid gray fine-grained
rock that can be split into thin
layers.
Sliced:
A
bracelet that is the same
thickness all the way around and
does not taper at the edges; as
though it were simply sliced off the
end of a cylinder.
Slide:
An ornament with a tube on the back.
A cord or
necklace can then be threaded
through the tube allowing the
ornament to slide along the length
of the cord or
necklace. See
Bolo.
Smoky
quartz: A variety of
quartz that ranges in color from
cloudy brown to a dark root beer
shade with a smoky appearance.
Smoky
topaz: see
Smoky Quartz.
Snap bar closure: The hinged
bar on the back of a
lever back or
omega back
earring.
Snake
chain: Unlike most
chains which are a series of
linked rings, a snake
chain is made up of round wavy
metal rings joined side by side
forming a flexible tube with a
smooth scaly texture like snake
skin.
Snow
Quartz: see
White Quartz.
Soda:
Any of various forms of
Sodium
carbonate used in making soap,
powders, glass, and paper.
Sodalite:
An
opaque blue-white
Silicate of
alumina and
Soda
with some
chlorine, (Sodium
aluminum
Silicate and
Sodium
chloride). It looks similar to
Lapis, and is a component of
Lapis, occurring in massive
dodecahedrons and found in
igneous rocks. It has varying
degrees of white veins of
calcite and an occasional speck
of
pyrite.
Sodium:
A common soft, waxy, light,
extremely malleable silver-white
unstable
metallic
element of the alkali group. It
is always found as a compound with
other
elements in nature, such as
common Salt,
albite, etc. Sodium burns with a
yellow flame, and is so readily
oxidized that it combines
violently with water and to be
preserved must be kept under
petroleum or some similar liquid.
Soldering:
A technique used in making and
repairing
jewelry whereby two pieces of
metal are joined by applying a
molten
metal which has a lower melting
point than the two
metals being joined.
Solitaire:
A single, (solitary),
gemstone mounted in a simple
Setting,
often found in a
ring or
pendant.
Sparkle:
A measure of the light reflected
out by a
diamond or stone as it is viewed
from different angles.
Spessartite: A red to
brownish-red
garnet composed of
alumina
manganese.
Spinel:
Probably named from the Latin
word "spina", (meaning "thorn"), for
its pointed crystals, spinel is a
hard
mineral with
octahedral crystals occurring in
igneous and
carbonate rocks. It consists
essentially of
alumina and
magnesia, but commonly contains
iron and sometimes also
chromium. It is found in a
variety of colors including blue,
green, brown, black, and the
valuable red variety which resembles
a
ruby. It was popular in medieval
jewelry.
Split
Ring: Most commonly used for
key-rings, a split ring is simply a
metal ring with a "split" around
its circumference. The split has an
opening to the side of the ring at
each end to allow a key or other
small ring to slide into the slit
and be pulled around the
circumference of the ring until it
reaches opening at the other end of
the split.
Spray
Brooch: A type of
brooch, usually worn at the
shoulder, which is characterized by
floral themes featuring long stemmed
jeweled flowers and long leaves.
Spring ring clasp: A very
common kind of
clasp used for joining two ends
of a
necklace. The
clasp itself consists of a
hollow
metal tube in a circle shape
with a gap in the side. The hollow
tube contains a small wire held in
place by a spring inside the tube
behind the wire. The wire can be
pulled back by means of a small knob
which slides along the outer edge of
the circular tube. Releasing the
knob allows the spring to push the
wire forward closing the gap. The
other end of the
necklace terminates in a small
ring. By using the knob on the
spring ring to open the gap in the
hollow circular tube, one can then
place the small ring through the gap
and close the wire through the ring
securing it in place and closing the
necklace.
Square
cut: A style of
gem
cutting resembling the
emerald cut.
Square setting: A square
shaped Setting
with a
prong at each corner.
Squash Blossom Necklace: A
traditional piece of Navajo
jewelry based on an old and
favored Spanish-Mexican ornament
which was actually not a squash, but
a stylized version of the
pomegranate. A shape that the
Spanish Conquistadores used as
buttons on their trousers. The
squash blossom necklace is composed
of
beads resembling squash blossoms
placed at regular intervals with a
naja, (crescent shaped
pendant), at the center.
Stabilized Turquoise:
Turquoise is very porous by
nature which allows it to absorb any
pollutants that it comes in contact
with, including oils from the skin.
Stabilized
turquoise has been treated by
various methods to reduce the
porosity, thus making less
changeable over time.
Stack
rings: Two or more
rings that are designed to be
stacked on the same finger at the
same time.
Stainless steel: An
extremely durable
alloy of steel and
chromium which can be polished
to resemble a
precious metal and is virtually
immune to rust, discoloration and
corrosion.
Stamping:
Using a
punch or die to cut or emboss a
sheet of
metal with a mark.
Star
garnets:
Almandines that exhibit an
asterism.
Star
Sapphires: Natural
sapphires
that exhibit an
asterism. These can be quite
valuable if the star is centered and
well-defined.
Stater:
A Silver
coin from ancient Greece.
Step cut:
See
Emerald Cut.
Link to STERLING SILVER products
Sterling Silver: Like
gold,
Silver
can be
alloyed with other
metals to improve its
durability. Sterling silver is the
industry standard containing 925
parts Silver
and 75 parts of another
metal, usually
copper.
Sterling silver can be used to plate
other
metals You
will notice that our sterling silver jewelry
is all marked 925 to assure
Silver
content. .With jewelry its
lustrous white color adds a complementary fresh light to the complexion
of the wearer.
Sterling Silver jewelry care
and cleaning:
The
pieces that you wear frequently need
very little care, but if the
sterling is stored for a length of
time it may need polishing
occasionally because silver reacts
with sulfur in the air which causes
it to tarnish. There is sulfur in egg, so if you spill egg on your
silver necklace it may discolor the silver. Any discoloration or tarnish
can be removed with a silver polish found in the hardware store or a
silver cloth from the supermarket. Always read the instructions
before use and rinse the jewelry well with water (preferably filtered) and a little
mild dish washing soap, rinse again in clear water and dry well with a
soft cloth.
For
sterling silver chains and other
solid sterling jewelry that does not
have stones in it, here is the
easiest and best way to make it
shine and gleam. Take a heat
resistant glass bowl, line it
with aluminium foil (kitchen foil)
place your sterling silver on top of
the foil. Sprinkle with sodium
bicarbonate (baking soda). Depending
on how much you are cleaning -
about a tablespoon full. Now pour
boiling water over this and it will
bubble up. Just leave it for
about 10 minutes. Remove the jewelry
and rinse it with clean preferably
filtered water, lay it on a soft
cloth and allow to dry. You now have
sparkling chains etc. All between
the links will be nice and clean,
Simple, economical and no harsh
chemicals. If the item was very
dirty I have found that after the
above procedure it may be necessary
to wipe it over with a silver
cleaning cloth and the tarnish will
come of quite eeasily.
Store jewelry separately in plastic pouches or soft cloth
bags or original boxes to keep them from being scratched by contact with
other items and to protect them from exposure to harsh daily elements.
Silver can be damaged by exposure to common cleaning solutions such as
bleach, ammonia, or chlorinated water. Best advice is to be
radiant and wear it often.
Stick
Pin: A
pin with an ornament on the top
worn vertically on a scarf, tie, or
lapel. Also called a "tie
pin" or "lapel
pin"
Stippled finish: A texture
formed by a series of pricks made
with a steel
punch.
Strass:
A
brilliant glass with high light
refraction and exceptional
iridescence, (essentially
consisting of a complex boroSilicate
of
lead and
potassium), used to manufacture
artificial
gemstones. Named after its
inventor, a German jeweler, F. Stras.
See also
Rhinestone.
Stud: A
simple style of
earring for
pierced ears that has a single
stone (such as a
pearl) or
metal ball on a straight
post with no dangling parts.
(See also
Button
earring).
Sulfate:
A Salt
containing Sulfur
dioxide.
Sulfur:
An abundant, pale yellow,
nonmetallic
element used in black gunpowder,
rubber vulcanization, the
manufacture of insecticides and
pharmaceuticals, and in the
preparation of sulfur compounds such
as hydrogen sulfide and sulfuric
acid.
Sulphur:
A variant spelling of
Sulfur.
Sunstone:
A variety of
oligoclase which can be
transparent or
translucent and varies in color
from golden to orange to red-brown.
Sunstone glitters due to
hematite or goethite crystals
suspended in the stone. It can be
found in Canada, Oregon, India,
Norway, and Russia. Sunstone is
brittle and has a hardness of 6 on
the
Mohs scale.
Swing Center:
The
central decorative motif of pendant
earrings which is free to move and
swing, it is suspended within a
similarly shaped frame.
Symmetry:
How similar one side of an
object is to the other side. The
lengths and angles on each side of a
faceted
gemstone are closely compared.
The more uniform the
cut, the higher the value of the
stone.
Synthetic:
Gemstones produced in a
laboratory rather than found in
nature. Synthetic
gemstones are not "fake", since
they have exactly the same chemical
characteristics as the natural
stone, but they are usually flawless
and much cheaper than the real
thing. The most common synthetic
gems are
emeralds,
rubies,
sapphires and
opals.