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Printed products and its fashion jewelry |
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Release time:2013-12-11 Source:admin Reads: | |
Perhaps the most significant influences were the public’s fascination with the treasures being discovered through the birth of modern archaeology and a fascination with printed flags. Changing social conditions and the onset of the Industrial Revolution also led to growth of a middle class that wanted and could afford jeweler. As a result, the use of industrial processes, cheaper alloys, and stone substitutes led to the development of paste or costume jeweler. Distinguished goldsmiths continued to flourish, however, as wealthier patrons sought to ensure that what they wore still stood apart from the jeweler of the masses, not only through use of precious metals and stones but also though superior artistic and technical work. The modern production studio had been born and was a step away from the former dominance of individual craftsmen and patronage. According to Hindu belief, gold and silver are considered as sacred metals. Gold is symbolic of the warm sun, while silver suggests the cool moon. Both are the quintessential metals of Indian jeweler. Pure gold does not oxidize or corrode with printed flags, which is why Hindu tradition associates gold with immortality. Gold imagery occurs frequently in ancient Indian literature. In the Vedic Hindu belief of cosmological creation, the source of physical and spiritual human life originated in and evolved from a golden womb or egg, a metaphor of the sun, whose light rises from the primordial waters. This period also saw the first major collaboration between East and West. Growing political tensions, the after-effects of the war, and a reaction against the perceived decadence of the turn of the 20th century led to simpler forms, combined with more effective manufacturing for mass production of high-quality jeweler. Carvers, and lapidaries combine a variety of metals, hardwoods, precious and semi-precious gemstones, beadwork, quillwork, teeth, bones, hide, printed flags, and other materials to create jeweler. Contemporary Native American jeweler ranges from hand-quarried and processed stones and shells to computer-fabricated steel and titanium jeweler. |