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Coe ring in gold, silver, amazonite and blue topaz

Coe ring in 9k or 18k gold, sterling silver, amazonite and blue topaz

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Handmade 9k or 18k gold ring, 25×11 mm semicircle, 25×11 mm amazonite. and 6mm blue topaz. Sterling silver hoop.

The amazonite It is a mineral of the feldspar family that has a very light blue-green color due to its high concentration of lead. It comes from the United States and Madagascar.

The blue topaz It is an aluminosilicate formed through fluorine emanations that are released from the crystallization of igneous rocks. The name topaz derives from Topazos Island in the Red Sea where the first specimens are believed to have been found. There are different shades: the darker London Blue topaz, the mid-tone Swiss Blue topaz, and the lighter Sky Blue topaz.

The gold pure, which has 24 carats, is a soft metal so it is mixed with other metals to give it hardness through the process called “alloying”. 18K gold contains 75% pure gold and 25% silver and copper. 9 carat gold contains 35.5% of pure gold and 64.5% of silver and copper.

The silver It is a malleable and soft metal, so it is usually mixed with other metals that give it hardness. In the case of 925 thousandths silver, the alloy consists of 92.5% of pure silver and 7.5% of copper.

SKU: s-1501-amazonite-topaz
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craft culture

Craft time is a time that takes us out of the urgency of everyday life. A time that obeys the materials with which he works, listening to them and accompanying them. It is therefore a gesture far from routine, the one that machines repeat over and over again. The time for crafts in Belén Bajo is also the time for durable materials, metals, stones, to which timeless, simple shapes are proposed, with a certain geometric flavor.

Stylistic influences

Belén Bajo jewelery seeks maximum formal simplicity without giving up a playful touch. In part, its formal universe comes from the Central European rationalist and functional culture, its Mediterranean roots and the survival of the plastic forms of the culture of Al-Andalus in which a geometrized nature is presented by means of infinite patterns.

About Bethlehem Bajo

Belén Bajo trained at the School of Fine Arts in Madrid. There, from formal experimentation, the accumulation of references and manual work, he developed a way of understanding both plastic creation, a universe of chromatic and material abstractions, as well as the value of the roundness of objects as carriers of symbolic meanings.