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They’re linked in so much that your store SA will see the website purchases but they will not help you toward being offered items in store. For in store offers, only in store purchases count.Hi,
Not sure if this is the right place to ask, but are hermes online accounts linked to store accounts?
@etoupebirkin Seasons greetings, hope you had a nice Xmas EB. I bet your house smells real good these days. I am not sure you saw my above post on labradorite and spectrolite. I thought of that b/c I was browsing Armenta on TRR. They use a lot of labradorite (not spectrolite, so I expect the Armenta stones will have a gray background, not black) and and I also saw a ring with pietersite. I have a huge (like palm size) carved horse pendant labradorite made by Amy Khan Russell years ago. I must have bent over b/c it fell off my silver collar and hit the hard tiled floor. The horse now has part of his nose chipped off. Labradorite is fragile; it's made (IMO) of a lot of partially fractured rocks that Mother Nature glued together for the time being.V
Veeerry Nice!! Those have a distinct blue cast which suggests to me they might be made of Finnish Spectrolite which is a higher grade of labradorite (it's got more color play).
From the web:
"Spectrolite is a very special, gem quality variety of Labradorite that can show a full spectrum of rainbow colours that can only be found in Finland. ... It also has a very dark, black base, and is considered a semi precious gem, whereas Labradorite generally is not."
I have a labradorite necklace I made with beads from bead store. They have a soft gray hue. Not much blue but still pretty. Years ago I looked at an Elizabeth Locke labradorite necklace in Mazza NM. Beautiful!!! Would have loved to have it.
Spectrolite can have yellow flashes, bright blue and green. I had a little rock from the Smithsonian Hall of Gems I kept on my desk that was like that.
A while back you went on a tour of the back rooms of the hall of gems with Jeffrey Post, is it? What did you think? I remember him commenting somewhere that he could not collect the kind of gems a museum carries -- to paraphrase, he collects what ordinary mortals do but he goes for the unusual. That seems like a reasonable proposition.
I used to buy cheap like $10 gems from ebay and they were not at all real according to the local jeweler. Which is what I wanted to find out. I got a couple set in a tiny pinky ring, and their use was adequate for my purposes. I was going for color.
Recently, I took a chance and dropped $100 on a tourmaline. (I belong to a gem society and they discuss on-line buying and selling. Seller had 100 percent feedback. Now, this was a crapshoot, I know it. Instead of getting a luminous colorful gem I got a tiny brownish pebble that looked like smoky quartz on a bad day. I got a refund!!! I should have left the seller crappy feedback but I decided to take the $$ and run. These days, you need a GIA cert to describe and validate a gemstone. Well, I'm not in that league. Plus, I don't collect gemstones.
It is hard to beat a big sparkly CZ. I had a citrine ring with a huge brownish citrine and the vendor (non-ebay) swapped it out for me with a huge pink Cz that matched the tiny pink spinels around the rim of the setting. (I didn't like the brown with the pink). That is a fun ring to wear.
Thank you eagle100us! I hope you enjoyed your holiday. Weather could be better but it's not like I have anywhere to go@Gnuj, I do hope you are having a very happy holiday weekend and that the weather was pleasant.