Hair Jewelry
Hair jewelry is jewelry containing or composed of locks of hair.
This type of jewelry was popular in the mid-1800's as a remembrance
of deceased loved ones.
Hagler, Stanley
Stanley Hagler was a jewelry designer whose pieces were opulent,
complex, hand-wired, and usually colorful. Hagler produced pieces
from 1953 until 1996. He produced pieces for Lord & Taylor,
Bergdorf Goodman, and Saks Fifth Avenue. Hagler's partner, Ian St
Geilarm, designed many of the Hagler pieces. After Stanley Hagler's
death in 1996, jewelry continued to be produced under the name Stanley
Hagler & Company.
Hallmark
A hallmark is an official mark (or a series of marks) made in metal
that indicates the fineness of the metal and the manufacturer's
mark. For example, a hallmark of 925 indicates 925 parts of gold
per 1000 weight. Other hallmarks indicate the maker of the piece
and sometimes the year of manufacture. In many countries (like Britain)
it is illegal to hallmark metal incorrectly; some countries are
notoriously lax in their enforcement of hallmark honesty.
Hammered Metals
Hammered metals have been formed, shaped, or decorated by a metalworker's
hammer. The surface of hammered metal is covered with crater-like
depressions made by a hammer. Many hammered metals are used in jewelry
including gold, silver, brass, aluminum, etc. The pin above is hammered
silve
Hardness
Hardness is measured using the Mohs Scale of Hardness. A substance's
hardness value indicates the materials resistance to scratching
and grades minerals on a comparative scale from 1 (very soft) to
10 (very hard).. In the Mohs scale, a mineral of a given hardness
rating will scratch other minerals of the same rating, as well as
any minerals of a lower rating. For example, sapphires and rubies
have a Mohs rating of 9 and will scratch each other, as well as
any mineral with a rating lower than 9. However, they will not scratch
diamonds, which are rated 10. The Mohs scale of mineral hardness
was devised by the German mineralogist Frederich Mohs (1773-1839)
in 1812.
Substance Hardness
Talc 1
Amber, Fingernail, Ivory, Shell, Jet 2.5
Gold 2-3
Bronze, Coral, Pearl 3
Iron 4
Glass 5
Opal 5.5-6.5
Amethyst, Chalcedony, Quartz, Steel (pocket knife) 7
Spinel, Topaz 8
Ruby, Sapphire 9
Diamond 10
Haskell, Miriam
Miriam Haskell (1899-1981) was a costume jewelry designer who designed
feminine, intricate jewelry. Haskell frequently used "antique"-gilded
surfaces, pearls, intricate beadwork, and naturalistic themes. Miriam
Haskell started signing her jewelry in the early 1950's although
she began selling jewelry in 1924. Her jewelry is still manufactured
and is widely collected.
Hawk's Eye
Hawk's eye is a green, grey or blue variety of quartz that has parallel,
fibrous inclusions of crocidolite that give it a greenish cat's
eye effect (chatoyancy). This mineral has a silky luster. It looks
a lot like Tiger's Eye, and often occurs with it in the same rock,
but the internal structure is different.
Heat Treatment
Heat treatment is the heating of stones to a high temperature in
order to enhance the color or clarity. For example, blue-green aquamarine
becomes blue with heat treatment and brown zircon becomes blue or
clear.
Heishi
Heishi (pronounced he-she) is jewelry made from disk-shaped beads
of shell (or turquoise, lapis lazuli, and other stones). Each bead
begins as a tiny flat piece of shell (or stone). A tiny stringing
hole is drilled though the fragment. Many of these jagged pieces
are strung together tightly on a wire and are then sanded into evenness
using a fine-grained sandstone and then sandpaper. The result is
a very smooth strand of disk-shaped beads. This is an ancient form
of bead-making developed by the Pueblos of North America.
Helenite
Helenite is a manmade (not natural) green glass that is made from
"rock dust" (not volcanic ash) taken from the vicinity
of the Mt. St. Helens volcano in Washington state. The dust is fired
to 2700 degrees F, forming glass, which is later faceted and used
as a gemstone. This glass is sometimes called emerald obsidianite
or Mount St. Helens obsidian (but it is not obsidian, which is a
natural glass). Helenite is sold as a souvenir of the eruption of
Mt. St. Helens on May 18, 1980. The composition of rock from Mt.
St. Helens is: Rock from Mt. St. Helens is composed of: silicone
60.50%, aluminum 16.60%, iron 6.02%, calcium 5.36%, sodium 4.18%,
manganese 2.59%, potassium 1.20%, titanium .90%, phosphorus .35%,
magnesium .12%, strontium .06%, Beryllium .04%, copper .03%, lead
.03%, zirconium .02%, chromium .02%, and zinc .02%; the remaining
0.16 percent is sulfur, chlorine, and water.
Heliotrope
Heliotrope (commonly known as bloodstone) is an inexpensive type
of chalcedony that is green with red highlights (caused by iron
oxide). Heliotrope is porous and relatively soft.
Hemalyke
Hemalyke is a synthetic hematite that is made by grinding up hematite,
adding a binder (glue) and then press-molding it. The stone is sometimes
faceted. Hemalyke looks very much like natural hematite - it is
very difficult to them apart.
Hematite
Hematite (sometimes spelled haematite, and also known as kidney
ore) is a lustrous, opaque, blue-black to silvery gray mineral often
used in jewelry. Hematite is iron oxide (Fe2O3). Hematite has a
hardness of 6.5 and a specific gravity of 4.95 to 5.16. When powdered,
hematite is red; when rubbed on a hard stone, it leaves a red streak.
Hematite was often used as seal stones, cut as intaglio. It is also
used as beads and is faceted, carved or cut as a cabochon for use
as a gemstone. The ancient Egyptians carved hematite into scarabs.
Hematite is found in England, Mexico, Australia, Brazil, and the
Lake Superior region of North America.
Herkimer Diamonds
Herkimer diamonds are clear, lustrous, doubly terminated crystals
of quartz - they are not true diamonds. These brilliant stones are
also called "Middleville Diamonds" or "Little Falls
Diamonds." Herkimer diamonds have a hardness of 7. This stone
is found in Middleville and Little Falls, Herkimer County, New York,
USA.
Hessonite
Hessonite (also called "cinnamon stone") is a cinnamon-brown
to orange gemstone variety of grossular garnet. Hessonite's formula
is Ca3Al2Si3O12; manganese that gives it its characteristic brown
color. This transparent stone has a hardness of 6.5 - 7 and a specific
gravity of 3.6. Hessonite is found in Sri Lanka, Brazil, Madagascar,
Canada, and California, USA. This stone is not enhanced.
Hobe
Hobe Cie is a costume jewelry company that was founded by William
Hobé in New York in the 1930's. William Hobe had immigrated
to the US from France, where his family had made fine jewelry for
generations. Hobe jewelry was used in showgirl costumes in the Ziegfeld
Follies (Hobe supplied many of the costumes themselves - this was
his original business in the US). Florence Ziegfeld (who founded
the Ziegfeld Follies) was probably the first person to use the term
"costume jewelry." Hobe jewelry was used in many Hollywood
movies. Hobe produced very high quality (and very high priced) jewelry
for upscale stores, often using semi-precious stones (like turquoise,
lapis lazuli, jade, and agate). In the 1940's, the Hobe slogan was
"Jewels of legendary splendor." The Hobe company is still
producing costume jewelry.
Hook And Eye Clasp
A hook and eye clasp is a simple and ancient jewelry fastener that
is composed of a hook and a circular piece that the hook can latch
onto. It is used to attach the two ends of a necklace or bracelet.
Howlite
Howlite is a soft, white to gray mineral that takes dye very easily,
and can be dyed to imitate turquoise very well (and is sometimes
unscrupulously sold as turquoise). Howlite was named for its discoverer,
Henry How, a Nova Scotia geologist.
Hyacinth
Hyacinth is a semi-precious stone that is also known as jacinth.
it is a lustrous orange-yellow, orange-red, or yellow-brown type
of zircon. Hyacinth has a hardness of 7.5 and a specific gravity
of 4.65. Sometimes, topaz and grossular garnet of this color are
also referred to as hyacinth (this can be very confusing). Hyacinth
is mined in Sri Lanka. Even more confusing is the origin of the
name, which comes from the Greek hyakinthos, which refers to blue
gemstone.
Hyacinth Opal
Hyacinth opal (also known as girasol) is a yellow or orange type
of precious opal. In this opal, the play of colors seems to come
from within the stone, like a floating light, and seems to follow
the light source.
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