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When it comes to engagement rings, nobody wants to compromise. The diamond ring has been an image of the quintessential symbol of love and commitment for almost a century. But diamonds are not the only classic choice. Before diamonds made their appearance in the mainstream market, a popular engagement ring setting was the bride’s birthstone. The birthstone engagement ring is quite classic – as classic as the 15th century, in fact! This is when the trend is thought to have originated in Poland, where folks thought birthstones had many inherent powers that could benefit the wearer.

How did people come to believe that birthstones had certain powers? Well, those stories came about some time during the writing of the book of Exodus in the Old Testament… Something to do with the breastplate of a high priest of the Hebrews. Perhaps that’s a story for another day.

In any case, it’s June, and that means we get to talk about pearls and moonstones! Pearls and moonstones both have a beautiful iridescent sheen, and they are the centerpiece for a couple of our more unique designs, the Nested Pearl Ring, and the Monhegan Moonstone Engagement Ring. The moonstone is a particularly beautiful type of feldspar that seems to glow quite like the surface of the moon. Many ancient civilizations attributed spiritual understanding, good health, and longevity to the moonstone.

We love pearls not only because they’re beautiful, but because they come from something as unassuming as an oyster! (Or mussels in some cases.) A pearl forms when something gets inside the shell that isn’t supposed to be there. Gradually, over years, the foreign object is covered with many layers of a protective coating called ‘nacre.’ When light interacts with all of these overlapping translucent layers, we see the iridescent luster that makes a pearl what it is. The ancient Greeks and Romans believed that, upon being born from the ocean like in Botticelli’s painting of Venus, the goddess of love cried tears of joy. As her tears fell back to the water, they hardened and became pearls.

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