Mughal Emerald & Pearl Necklace, ca. 1895
GUEST:
My mother-in-law gave it to me, and there was a note in the box that said it was from her grandmother's sister, and that it was seed pearls and jade, and the sister was born in 1861.
APPRAISER:
What we have here is a Mughal seed pearl and kundan-set emerald necklace. And the kundan setting is a method of carving into the emerald. They carve out channels into them, they set the gemstones, and then they hammer in lines of very high-karat gold. The stones are seed pearls and rubies. I would date it to around 1890, maybe 1900. It's all old Indian-manufactured.
GUEST (laughs): Wow!
APPRAISER:
Antique Indian jewelry is in demand now. The Indians are becoming a buying community, rather than a jewelry net selling community. They're searching for the old pieces. So an old necklace like this, at auction today, would be $4,000 to $6,000.
GUEST:
Oh, my goodness! (laughs): Wow! Thank you! That's terrific. I love wearing it.
Appraisal Details
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