geckodani
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2008
- Messages
- 9,021
It''s to keep them from rubbing against each other and to keep all of them from spilling on the floor should the string break. This happened to me recently in a hotel. Sometimes, if I''m lazy and I know I''m going to restring the pearls into a different necklace, I don''t knot. Shhhhhhhhh, don''t tell anyone.Date: 8/14/2009 2:37:28 PM
Author:geckodani
Okay. Enlighten me. Why are pearls knotted? Is it to keep them from knocking against each other? Are necklaces ever strung without the knots?
Would I be a bad girl if I wore an unknotted strand I picked up wholesale at a Gem show?![]()
Hee hee.Date: 8/14/2009 3:37:05 PM
Author: brightlight
It''s to keep them from rubbing against each other and to keep all of them from spilling on the floor should the string break. This happened to me recently in a hotel. Sometimes, if I''m lazy and I know I''m going to restring the pearls into a different necklace, I don''t knot. Shhhhhhhhh, don''t tell anyone.Date: 8/14/2009 2:37:28 PM
Author:geckodani
Okay. Enlighten me. Why are pearls knotted? Is it to keep them from knocking against each other? Are necklaces ever strung without the knots?
Would I be a bad girl if I wore an unknotted strand I picked up wholesale at a Gem show?![]()
lol... all I can think about is when FI and I went to a sporting goods store to pick up PowerPro and the SA there made the funniest face and said "yeah, it would take some crazy guy to snap this line!" and imitated someone trying to pull it off, HA!Date: 8/14/2009 8:30:20 PM
Author: jmtomaui
Gecko, another thought for you would be to restring them on 49 gauge wire. The wire is very flexible but much less likely to break / snap like thread can.
Or, rather than leave them on the cotton or silk string they usually come on, you could restring them on an extremely strong thread such as PowerPro fishing line. It is braided very fine like silk is but get a 20 - 30 pound test, double it and thread the pearls on without knotting. It would take the strength of a 40 - 60 pound pull to break the string...
This is probably the best option for my lack of manual dexterity.Date: 8/14/2009 8:30:20 PM
Author: jmtomaui
Gecko, another thought for you would be to restring them on 49 gauge wire. The wire is very flexible but much less likely to break / snap like thread can.
Or, rather than leave them on the cotton or silk string they usually come on, you could restring them on an extremely strong thread such as PowerPro fishing line. It is braided very fine like silk is but get a 20 - 30 pound test, double it and thread the pearls on without knotting. It would take the strength of a 40 - 60 pound pull to break the string...
One that I think I will leave to the pros!Date: 8/18/2009 1:05:52 PM
Author: kas baby
lol... all I can think about is when FI and I went to a sporting goods store to pick up PowerPro and the SA there made the funniest face and said ''yeah, it would take some crazy guy to snap this line!'' and imitated someone trying to pull it off, HA!
its not hard to knot. what is hard is knotting nicely. making the spacing even and getting it close to the pearls... it really is an art
Date: 8/14/2009 3:13:48 PM
Author: jmtomaui
I too used to believe that knotting was the sign of the difference between real and fake but Mikimotos are not knotted after the first couple of pearls next to the clasp. The rest are not knotted. I think I have heard it said that not knotting is the eastern way of stringing pearls.
MishB, I could be wrong about the Mikimotos... I read that on a pearl forum that I belong to and since I have not done any research for myself, I may have misspoken! Or I may have misunderstood what I was reading... I sure don''t want you to doubt what you have!Date: 8/23/2009 8:57:20 AM
Author: MishB
Date: 8/14/2009 3:13:48 PM
Author: jmtomaui
I too used to believe that knotting was the sign of the difference between real and fake but Mikimotos are not knotted after the first couple of pearls next to the clasp. The rest are not knotted. I think I have heard it said that not knotting is the eastern way of stringing pearls.
jmtomaui, I have a string of vintage mikimotos (an inheritance), I have no reason to believe they aren''t genuine. I''ve recently had them cleaned and restrung but they were definitely knotted before. I guess they were restrung and knotted sometime in the past?