Pearl

Pearl is the only gemstone made by a living organism. It forms when a mollusk deposits concentric layers of nacre — calcium carbonate bound with an organic protein — around an irritant inside its shell. Natural pearls form without human intervention; cultured pearls are produced by introducing a nucleus into the mollusk and allowing the same layering process to occur over several years. The finest natural pearls historically came from the Persian Gulf; today Japan, Australia, French Polynesia, and China are the major sources of cultured material. Each pearl is the product of years of biological process, which is why no two are identical.
The surface of a pearl has a quality called orient — a soft iridescent shimmer that shifts as the light or the pearl moves. It is not the flash of opal or the color-play of labradorite; it is quieter, more like the light on still water. Pearl is for people who move through the world with that kind of ease: unhurried, composed, present without needing to announce it. It wears across every context and every age.
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