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Costume jewelry is jewelry that is made of less valuable materials,
including base metals, glass, plastic, and synthetic stones, in
place of more valuable materials such as precious metals and gems.
These items are usually, but not always, inexpensive, and often
flashy. Costume jewelry is mainly used for fashion purposes, opposed
to "real" (precious) jewelery which may exist primary as
collectables, keepsakes, or investments. |
Costume jewelry gets its name from its use in stage
costumes
ostume jewelry can vary from vintage rhinestone sets to
the latest fashions such as hair accessories and body
jewelry with imitation stones.
Coco Chanel greatly popularized the use of faux jewelry in
her years as a fashion designer, bringing costume jewelry to
life with gold and faux pearls.
Pennino Brothers Jewelry is one rare, but well-known brand
of costume jewelry.
Fashion Jewelry (British: Fashion Jewellery), once known as
"paste" - named after the theatrical jewels that were
"pasted" onto costumes - and later as "Costume jewelry"
because of its theatrical roots - by the 1960s the term was
coined to represent a wide category of earrings, bracelets,
pendants, rings and other similar accessories that were made
of lesser value materials than traditional or "real" jewelry
like gold, silver or diamonds.
While at one time the manufacture of fashion jewelry
included the use of inexpensive glass components - most
notably rhinestones, or a manmade material known as "lucite"
- all set in a base metal of pewter, nickel or brass, today
the category also includes high end crystals, simulated
gemstones, CZs or cubic zirconia simulated diamonds, and lab
created gemstones as well as some semi-precious stones and
sometimes wood. Metals include gold-over-brass,
silver-over-brass, and sometimes gold-over-silver (known as
vermeil), as well as sterling silver. In lower priced
fashion jewelry you may still find gold plating over pewter,
nickel or assorted other metals, and sometimes fashion
jewelry imported from countries outside the United States
may contain lead. Some less expensive fashion jewelry can
also contain components made of plastic or acrylic.
In many instances, high end fashion jewelry has achieved a
"collectible" status, meaning it increases in value as time
goes on. The secondary market for "vintage" fashion jewelry
can be quite lucrative, making it a good investment as well
as a trendy way to update your wardrobe. |