May 17, 2012
Garmen Yuen Tour Details

Garmen
Yuen
Garmen Yuen
 

Garmen Fine Jewelry

E-mail me

Phone
916-921-1135

 
   
Click on an image below to see a Virtual Tour
Powered by Spins Unlimited USA
Garmen Fine Jewelry
1537 Howe Ave. Sacramento, California 95825
Details:
Georgian Period: 1714-1830
Jewelry designs of nature featuring flowers, leaves, insects,
birds, feathers, and ribbons. Engraved gemstones and intaglios
were favored along with agates and cabochon cut stones. During
the early nineteenth century, cameo brooches and earrings became
popular. Garnets, turquoise, amethyst, and particularly pearls
were the rage.




-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------

Early Victorian Period: 1837-1860
The dominant style of the 1840's featured scrollwork, floral
sprays, animal themes and multi-color gold work. There was a
surge of deep religious feelings which gave way to a Gothic
Revival Movement. This movement brought about a renewed interest
in enameled jewelry.

Victorian Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Mid-Victorian(Grand) Period: 1860-1885
Massive suites of colored stone jewelry became popular. Mosaics,
sea shells, fringes, and rosettes were used with increasing
frequency. Pieces were set in Etruscans style frames. The death
of Prince Albert in 1861 threw the entire population into
mourning. Jet jewelry became extremely popular and was often
imitated. The 1880's saw the rise of heavy lockets and chains,
cuff bracelets and brooches.

Victorian Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Late Victorian (Aesthetic) Period: 1885-1900
Diamonds gained an all time high in popularity. Bird, insect, and
animal themes took on new meaning as genuine scarabs, birds, and
claws were set in metal. Many pieces of jewelry featured spring
mechanisms. The delicate pendants of colored stones and pearls
were very popular during the late 1880's.

Victorian Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Arts and Crafts Movement: 1894-1923
Arts and Crafts jewelers rebelled against the mass production
brought on by the Industrial Revolution. They formed the Arts and
Crafts Exhibition Society in 1888. These jewelers were opposed to
any specialization of their craft. They worked mainly in silver
using uncut and cabochon stones. Color was very important and
many pieces were brightly colored.



-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Art Nouveau Period: 1890-1915
Art Nouveau jewelers used flowing feminine and fantasy figures,
stylized flowers, vines, leaves, scrolls, birds, serpents and
insects in beautiful enamels. Plique-a-jour enamel was commonly
used which is a transparent enamel with out a metal backing.
Cabochon gemstones as well as pearls were incorporated into the
designs along with the scrolling gold work. Rene Jules Lalique
led the French in Art Nouveau jewelry, while Louis Comfort
Tiffany was the American Jeweler best known for his Art Nouveau
designs.

Art Nouveau Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Edwardian Period: 1901-1910
Jewelry for this period was strikingly feminine with a lacy and
delicate appearance. Common motifs are bows, ribbons, urns,
stars, crescents and garlands of small flowers. A common trait of
Edwardian jewelry is platinum on yellow gold usually with all
diamond trim, giving this period its all white appearance. Large
focus diamonds were usually Old European cuts, with smaller
diamonds in rose or single cuts for accents. Sometimes large
high-quality faceted colored gemstones were used as focal points,
but diamonds, pearls and moonstones were the most favored.

Edwardian Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Art Deco Period: 1920-1935
The introduction of cubism into the art world after 1925 brought
about the strong geometrical patterns and angular shapes
associated with Art Deco today. Diamonds and platinum were used
without regard to cost. Stones were cut into triangles,
pentagons, trapezoids along with oblong shapes and emerald cuts.
Pav set diamonds were often accented with caliber cut colored
gemstones- rubies, sapphire, emeralds and onyx in strong
contrasting combinations. The Asian influence can be seen by the
carved jade and coral in pendants, bracelets, and earrings, as
well as carved rubies, sapphires and emeralds from India. Well
known French designers were, Cartier, Bucheron, Van Cleef and
Arpels, Fouquet and Mauboussin. For the Americans, it was Tiffany
and Company and Harry Winston.

Art Deco Page

-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Retro Period: 1935-1949
The late 1930's and early 1940's saw Europe going from the Great
Depression directly into W.W.II. All of the platinum and much of
the gold and silver were needed to fund the war. It was during
this period that the American jewelry market finally came into
its own. Colored gold (yellow, pink, and green) sometimes
combined in bi-colored or tri-colored pieces, was back after
several decades of white metal dominance. Designs were
three-dimensional and sculptural incorporating ribbons, bows and
fabric-like folds. Gemstones were often recycled from older
jewelry, diamonds and synthetic rubies and sapphires were
combined for a "patriotic" look. After the United States entered
the war, 1941, jewelry became less romantic and took on a
militaristic look.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



1950's
Mid-century modernism influenced this period with the use of
abstract sprays of diamonds in mixed cuts, starbursts and
"atomic" shapes. Textured gold dominated this decade with
Florentine finishes, foxtail chain, twisted rope, braided wire,
mesh, reeding, fluting and piercing. Gold jewelry without
gemstones was worn primarily in the daytime, with diamond jewelry
for the evenings. Amethyst, turquoise, and coral were the
favorite colored gemstones while cultured pearls were gaining
acceptance into day wear.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



1960's
This "Anything Goes" period had little restrictions. Yellow gold,
platinum and silver were all used with natural gemstone crystals
and "drusy" gemstones (micro-crystals forming on a matrix).
Cabochon gemstones, such as turquoise, were mixed with round
brilliant cut diamonds and other faceted gems set in yellow gold.
Artists used organic abstract shapes with jagged edges that were
incorporated in textured metals.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



1970's

In the cool and collected 70's, women began buying their own
jewelry. This surge demanded affordable quality and the need for
"that something different." To do this, jewelers used
non-precious materials such as rock crystal, exotic woods, ivory
and coral. Baguette diamonds were mounted into solitaires,
necklaces and bracelets and were worn both at night and during
the daytime. Long necklaces remained popular. To accentuate the
jewelry, gemstones such as lapis lazuli, coral, and onyx were
used.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



1980-1990's
The 1980's saw women gaining equality in the workplace. The
televisions shows such as "Dynasty" and "Dallas" created a demand
for glitz and glamour, while Princess Diana's wedding triggered a
graceful, refined fashion emergence. Colored pearls were
fashionable in long or short strands with diamond clasps that
could be worn in the front or back. In the 1990's, tanzanite
became popular along with aquamarine, and retro designs from
almost every period. Jewelry designs could be large and chunky,
elegant and sophisticated, or stark and minimalist. Silver gained
tremendous popularity, as did toe rings and body jewelry. Pierced
ears with four or five earrings started a whole new fashion
craze.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------



Y2K
As with every era, the new millennium ushered in new designers
and new techniques. Colored diamonds hit unprecedented levels of
popularity with enticing names such as chocolate, cognac and
champagne. Alternate materials including rubber, plastic and
stainless steel started appearing with diamonds and pearls.


Last Tour Update: May 15, 2012
Photo Slideshow
 
 
This Interface Design Protected by Copyright © SpinsUnlimited.com 2007 to present. Information contained herein has not been verified by SpinsUnlimited.com or its agents. Interested parties should independently verify any and all information posted including but not limited to any and all music and or voiceovers uploads. This website is not intended to be a solicitation for the purchase, sale, or lease of real property or any property thereof and is not a retell avenue for any product of all business or any and all Client's.
 
Spins Unlimited © 2011. All Rights Reserved.