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AMETHYST AND PERIDOT CASCADE
Amethyst (February birthstone) and peridot (August birthstone) teardrops and rondelles on sterling silver wire and chain. Price: $125.00.
Fun fact about peridot: it has been found in meteorites.
ONYX AND QUARTZ CASCADE
An onyx briolette hangs from a sterling silver chain with grey moonstone, rutilated quartz, freshwater pearls, and Herkimer diamonds. Price: $125.00
HAMMERED HOOPS WITH BLUE TOPAZ
Hand-wrought sterling silver hoops with blue topaz briolettes and quartz teardrops. Price: $90.00
BLUE GEM CASCADE
Labradorite, iolite, and kyanite teardrops and rondelles on sterling silver chain and wire. Price: $125.00
CITRINE CASCADE
Citrine and topaz with carnelian and a single ruby, wrapped with gold-filled wire on gold-filled chain. Price: $125
AMETHYST WITH PEARL CLUSTER-TOP
Large tear-drop amethysts (February birthstone) topped with a cluster of freshwater pearls, Herkimer diamonds, and amethyst chips. Price: $75.00
LABRADORITE LINK NECKLACE
Five labradorite teardrops hang from a chain of hand-wrought sterling silver circles with amethyst and labradorite rondelles. Necklace closes with a silver hook.
Price: $250.00
LABRADORITE DROPS
Labradorite briolettes with labradorite beads and a freshwater pearl on gold-filled wire. Price: $60.00
RUTILATED QUARTZ TEARDROPS
Rutilated quartz teardrops hang from two hand-wrought silver hoops. Ties together with an adjustable strip of black suede. Price: $250.00
Chunky amethysts hang from bezel-set amethyst cabochons and peridot rondelles.
Price: $300.00

To purchase my jewelry, please contact me .

You can also buy my jewelry at:
139 Art and Design Co-Op
139 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn.
(718) 797-1243
On Facebook

About the Materials

I use semiprecious stones in all of my jewelry.
Herkimer diamonds and freshwater pearls
add extra sparkle and contrast.

No artificial ingredients are ever used;
that means no cut glass or human-made crystals.

Each piece of my jewelry is unique, due to differences in
the natural stones and in the cut of their light-reflecting
facets. This is especially true of labradorite, a mineral in
which the colors actually flicker as light goes through
the various layers of the stone.


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Copyright Brooke Dramer 2018 All rights reserved.

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