News
-
Pearls Through Time: The Legacy and Color of June’s Most Iconic Gem
Before diamonds lit up red carpets, there were pearls soft, luminous, untouched by fire or blade. They are the only gem born whole, shaped not by earth’s pressure but by the quiet resistance of a mollusk. Pearls speak not in sparkle, but in glow a softer radiance that has captured hearts for thousands of years.
Their story begins in ancient civilizations. In Egypt, Cleopatra famously dissolved a pearl in vinegar to prove her wealth and drank it. The Romans valued pearls above all other gems, draping them over furniture, armor, and even shoes. In Imperial China, pearls were symbols of wisdom and protection. Medieval knights sewed them into their garments for luck in battle. European royals considered them so precious, they were once reserved by law for nobility alone.
By the Renaissance, pearls were currency, diplomacy, and power gifted between kings, stitched into coronation gowns, passed down in secret through generations. Before cultured pearls, each one was a miracle of nature, a treasure fished from the depths and offered to the elite.
And yet, for all their ancient prestige, pearls remain modern perhaps more now than ever. They are the emblem of enduring femininity, evolving elegance, and quiet power.