#EMERALD
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pokemon-cards-hourly · 18 hours ago
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spahhzy · 22 hours ago
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Cinder: Where's Jaune?
Pyrrha: He got away...
Cinder: You mean to tell me that the most wanted man just happened to get away? What about the No-Nut-List?
Pyrrha: Forget the list...it's over.
Cinder looks at Emerald.
Cinder: I want every single woman after Jaune.
Emerald: E-everyone?
Cinder: EVERYONE!!
.
Jaune running through the streets of Vale after successfully beating No-Nut-November.
He rose through the ranks of very gorgeous women and managed to defeat all of their seductive attempts to have sex.
So then why? Why was he running? He was freed of the challenge, the champion? Shouldn't he accept the spoils of war.
Unfortunately, Destroy-Dick-December is here, and he's not sure he has strength, or aura to survive these ladies.
*briiiiiing*
Jaune opened up his scroll.
Cinder: Hey, hot shot. Hey, thanks for helping us out. We've been able to capture every 'no nut participant' thanks to you, now I'll take that into consideration if you give yourself up...to me~
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toyastales · 2 months ago
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A bracelet clasp with a Medusa on an emerald cameo. Gold is treated with diamond and enamel. 18th century. Made in England.
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academic-vampire · 4 months ago
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𝘞𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘤𝘰𝘧𝘧𝘦𝘦 𝘸𝘰𝘶𝘭𝘥 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘭𝘪𝘬𝘦 𝘵𝘰𝘥𝘢𝘺? ☕️ @cafe-camus
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lycomorpha · 11 months ago
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Please enjoy this magical small emerald moth friend who visited me last year. I'm looking forward to mothing season starting again soon! 🦋💚
May your year be filled with all the soft beautiful moths you need to get through it, including this one.
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jisuto · 6 months ago
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lionfloss · 2 years ago
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by K-Abe
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soft-stims · 2 years ago
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Emerald green stimboard for anon
x x x - x x x - x x x
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artifacts-and-arthropods · 1 year ago
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Emerald Spectacles from India, c. 1620-1660 CE: the lenses of these spectacles were cut from a single 300-carat emerald, and it was believed that they possessed mystical properties
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These eyeglasses are also known by the name "Astaneh-e ferdaws," meaning "Gate of Paradise," based on the symbolic associations between the color green and the concept of spiritual salvation/Paradise. That symbolism (which is rooted in Islamic tradition) was especially popular in Mughal-era India, where the spectacles were made.
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The lenses were crafted from two thin slices of the same emerald. Together, the lenses have a combined weight of about 27 carats, but given the precision, size, and shape of each lens, experts believe that the original emerald likely weighed in excess of 300 carats (more than sixty grams) before it was cleaved down in order to produce the lenses. The emerald was sourced from a mine in Muzo, Colombia, and it was then transported across the Atlantic by Spanish or Portuguese merchants.
Each lens is encircled by a series of rose-cut diamonds, which run along an ornate frame made of gold and silver. The diamond-studded frame was added in the 1890s, when the original prince-nez design was fitted with more modern frames.
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The emerald eyeglasses have long been paired with a second set of spectacles, and they were almost certainly commissioned by the same patron. This second pair is known as "Halqeh-e nur," or the "Halo of Light."
The Halo of Light features lenses that were made from slices of diamond. The diamond lenses were cleaved from a single stone, just like the emerald lenses, with the diamond itself being sourced from a mine in Southern India. It's estimated that the original, uncut diamond would have weighed about 200-300 carats, which would make it one of the largest uncut diamonds ever found.
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The lenses are so clear and so smoothly cut that it sometimes looks like they're not even there.
Both sets of spectacles date back to the mid-1600s, and it's generally believed that they were commissioned by a Mughal emperor or prince. The identity of that person is still a bit of a mystery, but it has been widely speculated that the patron was Shah Jahan -- the Mughal ruler who famously commissioned the Taj Mahal after the death of his wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Shah Jahan did rule as the Mughal emperor from about 1628 to 1658.
The emerald and diamond lenses may have been chosen for symbolic, sentimental, and/or cultural reasons, or they may have been chosen simply because they're pretty and extravagant; the original meaning and purpose behind the design is still unclear. Experts do believe that the eyeglasses were designed to be worn by someone, though.
At times, it was believed that the spectacles had spiritual properties, like the ability to promote healing, to ward off evil, to impart wisdom, and to bring the wearer closer to enlightenment. Those beliefs are largely based on the spiritual significance that emeralds and diamonds can have within certain Indic and Islamic traditions -- emeralds may be viewed as an emblem of Paradise, salvation, healing, cleansing, and eternal life, while diamonds are similarly associated with enlightenment, wisdom, celestial light, and mysticism.
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The Gate of Paradise and the Halo of Light were both kept in the collections of a wealthy Indian family until 1980, when they were sold to private collectors, and they were then put up for auction once again in 2021. They were most recently valued at about $2 million to $3.4 million per pair.
Sources & More Info:
Sotheby's: Mughal Spectacles
Architectural Digest of India: At Sotheby's auction, Mughal-era eyeglasses made of diamond and emerald create a stir
Only Natural Diamonds: Auspicious Sight & the Halqeh-e Nur Spectacles
The Royal Society Publishing: Cleaving the Halqeh-Ye Nur Diamonds
Gemological Institution of America: Two Antique Mughal Spectacles with Gemstone Lenses
Manuscript: From Satan's Crown to the Holy Grail: emeralds in myth, magic, and history
CNN: The $3.5 million Spectacles Said to Ward off Evil
BBC: Rare Mughal Era Spectacles to be Auctioned by Sotheby's
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frostedmagnolias · 2 months ago
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Pendant
c. 1680-1700
Spain
Gold, set with table-cut emeralds, and hung with an emerald drop
Victoria and Albert Museum
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retrogamingblog2 · 6 months ago
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Zelda Spiritual Stone Necklaces made by HaelsJewelry
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toyastales · 2 months ago
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Gold, emerald, diamond, and enamel signet ring with clock, crafted by Johannes Butz of Augsburg, Germany, 2nd quarter of the 17th Century AD.
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artifacts-archive · 8 months ago
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Dagger with Scabbard
Indian, Mughal 1605–27
The hilt of the dagger is constructed of heavy sections of gold over an iron core and its scabbard mounts are of solid gold. All the intricately engraved surfaces are set with gems and colored glass finely cut with floral forms. The designs closely parallel those in Mughal painting of the early seventeenth century, suggesting the dagger dates from the reign of Emperor Jahangir (1605–27), whose deep love of nature, especially flowers, is well documented in his memoirs, the "Tuzuk." The blade is forged of watered steel.
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fashionsfromhistory · 7 months ago
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Pendant
Henry Wilson
c.1908
Indianapolis Museum of Art (Accession Number: 2005.22)
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nailsonblackwomen · 1 year ago
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