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Winter Evening necklaces

Winter Evening necklaces
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Winter Evening necklaces from Burnstein Azalee Jewelry
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* 14-karat gold & gemstones
* genuine design
* without blinking, low lag
* handmade jewelry

Perms: copy

IM Chrysalida Burnstein if you want to personalize your gift, for 10% of price, with special message/notecard, in beautiful box.

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Size settings:

All of pieces from Burnstein Azalee Jewelry comes with a resizing option.

After you wear piece of jewelry, touch the object. After touching a prim it offers you options to resize all prims of the piece of jewelry 1, 5 or 10 percent smaller or bigger. Also, by same menu you can change shy, glow, brightness, transparency, diamond and gold textures.

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Wear Winter Evening necklace 01 on chest and Winter Evening necklace 02 on spine.

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Gemstones

Generally speaking, a gemstone ("The Flower of the Mineral Kingdom") is a stone that is beautiful, rare, and durable (resistant to abrasion, fracturing and chemical reactions). Some minerals can be very beautiful, but they may be too soft and will scratch easily (such as the mineral fluorite). Fluorite is extremely colorful and pretty but has a hardness of only 4 on the Moh's hardness scale and has four perfect cleavage directions, which makes it only an oddity as a cut gem. Others are too common and are given a semi-precious status (such as agate). Most gemstones have good hardness (above 5) and a high index of refraction (the higher the index of refraction the greater the sparkle). All gemstones have some characteristics falling short of perfection though; even the seemingly perfect Diamond has four directions of cleavage. Note that the most common mineral in the Earth's crust is quartz, with a hardness of 7. Since quartz is everywhere (especially in common dirt and dust), any material that is softer may be scratched during ordinary wear.

Most gems are silicates which can be very stable, hard minerals. A few gems are oxides and only one gem, diamond, is composed of a single element, carbon. There are also many gemstones that are not true minerals, but which are gemstone varieties of recognized minerals. In most cases, these variety names are historical, as the gemstones were not recognized as being varieties of other minerals until well after the name was in common use (such as aquamarine, emerald, and heliodor as varieties of beryl). Often, new names will be created for ordinary sounding minerals which sound prettier or more valuable, such as "Moldavite" for the green variety of tektites. In some cases, the names are true misnomers, such as "Green Amethyst" for prasiolite (a transparent green variety of quartz).

A few gemstones are mineraloids (not true minerals) and are included below: opal, amber, and moldavite.

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* Purchases of any Burnstein Azalee Jewelry products grants you license to use it in the Second Life® world.
* All rights are reserved. PROHIBITED is any reproduction and/or distribution, even partial, on Second Life® and in others Grids
* Our Products are licensed to be used within Second Life® world only. IS NOT ALLOWED to export them in other grids.

Infringements of these terms of use will be subjected to DMCA (Digital Millemium Copyright Act), i.e. United States copyright law that criminalizes production and dissemination of technology, devices, or services intended to circumvent measures that control access to copyrighted works.

See item in Second Life