![]() |
Pearls
According to ancient Chinese legend, the moon holds the power to create pearls, instilling them with its celestial glow and mystery. Pearls have been treasured for their lustrous, creamy texture and subtle iridescent reflections since the dawn of humankind.
Because natural pearls are so rare and difficult to recover from the ocean's depths, man invented the technique of culturing salt and freshwater pearls from oysters and other mollusks carefully seeded with irritants similar to those produced by nature. The painstaking effort of culturing is one of the most dramatic examples of man's quest to coax beauty from nature.
Due to demand for perfectly matched white pearl strands, cultured, fresh and saltwater pearls are often bleached to achieve a uniform color. They may also be polished in tumblers to clean and improve their luster.
Pearls are most commonly thought of as white, but they are actually produced in many colors, including gold, yellow, champagne, pink, peach, lavender, gray, and black.
Produced by a living organism, pearls require special care because they contain calcareous crystals that are sensitive to chemicals and acids. To care for your cultured pearls, avoid using perfume, hairspray, abrasives, solvents, and nail polish removers while wearing them. Like your skin, cultured pearls contain water and may dehydrate and crack if exposed continuously to arid conditions.
Tahitian Cultured Pearls
Tahitian cultured pearls are known for their compelling dark color. Grown in black-lip oysters, Tahitian cultured pearls range in color from metallic to gray, sometimes with colorful overtones. Because so few black-lip oysters live long enough to create pearls, Tahitian cultured pearls are extremely rare. Jewelers often have difficultly matching Tahitian cultured pearls together for strands or earrings, therefore making Tahitian cultured pearl jewelry very valuable.
Sea Magic Cultured Pearls® by Mikimoto
In 1893, Kokichi Mikimoto succeeded in culturing the first pearl.
"I would like to adorn the necks of all the women of the world with pearls," he said.
Learn more.
See our Collection of Tahitian Pearls Jewelry
See our Collection of Cultured Pearl Jewelry

