Saturday, January 24, 2009

Countdown to Tucson 2009

It is almost here; Tucson 2009 Gem & Mineral Show!! In about a week, millions of people, thousands of vendors and hundreds of shows (most wholesale with a few open to the public) will mark the beginning of the largest show in the United States.







This is the venue to get your stock for the entire year, or even several years if you are one who purchases in bulk. Anything from raw stones (uncut, undrilled, unfinished, unpolished, etc), to finished and raw precious gems (diamonds, sapphires, and emeralds just to name a few), to silver-gold-copper-brass findings and stringing materials, storage containers, tools and equipment, jewelry and gifts, to show displays, bags, and boxes, and all the natural gemstones in cuts and types that are as unusual as the places they come from.


Over the next week I’ll be highlighting some of my favorite vendors and shows that will be at Tucson 2009; so bookmark and check back here all next week for a pre-view of Tucson 2009!


The Countdown Begins……….

Friday, January 23, 2009

Unusual & Exotic – Turritella Fossil Agate

Turritella Agate is not right. It is not an Agate, but more closely related to Jasper, like Petrified Wood. It is not a fossil of Turritella Gastropods, but a fossil of Elimia Tenera Gastropods. Elimia Tenera are fresh water snails (gastropods) that share a very similar shape to ocean born Turritellas. Which means these dear little crystal companions are in desperate need of a more appropriate name.

The story of these lively prehistoric gems begins in early Tertiery times (approximately 60 million years ago). A series of geological events were causing the uplifting of mountains that eventually would be known as the Rockies. As the land lifts upwards it forms three Eocene Age lakes in the area of Wyoming, Montana, Colorado and Utah. Geologists have named them the Fossil, Ulinta and Gosiute Lakes. Life thrived within the waters and along the shorelines of these lakes. Other fossilized material from the area shows that plant life, reptiles and fish flourished along with the millions of fresh water gastropods and bi-valves. During those long ago days, residents of the lakes enjoyed a subtropical climate, but also lived under the constant threat of volcanic eruptions.

Mortality layers containing volcanic ash throughout the area suggest that there were numerous cycles of life and extinction over the millennia. It was the violent eruptions of the nearby volcanos which helped to create a pristine environment for fossils to form. Whole schools of the primal Kenightia (looks like a Herring) fish have been found in the fossilized beds of the Eocene lakes. Palm Trees, Turtles and Crocodile imprints have been found along what would have been the lakes' shorelines. The poorly named gemstone, Turritella Agate comes from the floor of these primordial lakes. Continued eruptions and fallout from the region's volcanos allowed much of the lakes' bottoms to be buried in ash as the lakes retreated or dried up (geologists are not sure what really happened to the lakes).

Essentially the mud and everything in it became petrified; frozen in stone. Besides the mis-identified Elimia Tenera gastropods, these fossil crystals also contain prehistoric bi-valves called Pleisielliptio and Sphaerium. Other varieties of ancient snails like Hydrobia and Valvata, plus some rarer Biomphalaria and Lymnaea are also found in Turritella Agates. In Sweetwater County Wyoming the petrified lake floor is up to two feet thick covering several acres (and miles in some cases).

While Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and Montana are the only sources for Turritella Agates, there seems to be some evidence that other such deposits may exist on the planet. An archeological dig in the Czech Republic revealed beads containing fossils of Gastropods that are almost 30,000 years old.

Traditional Properties & Beliefs
All Fossils are very well tuned for journeying into past lives. The extra high energy in the Turritella Agate adds a turbo boost to your journey. The abundance of frozen life within a single gem helps you to "see" clearer and understand more quickly the impressions and images you receive during your journey.

Are you having trouble solidifying a solution to a nagging problem? Every time you reach for the answer it slips away? Or you get bogged down in your own muddy thoughts and emotions? Try a quiet meditation with this dark crystal. Its long ago past was also muddy and slippery. Anytime something moved upon the surface, muck was stirred up and vision was clouded. You see this same entity today, everything is crystal clear. Every curve of every snail or clam is easy to see, easy to understand, easy to deal with. Just like problems, if we are patient and allow time for the dust to settle.
An excellent crystal for healing and clearing the Base and Crown Chakra. It may also increase physical energy, especially when the body is being challenged by fatigue or stress. Turritella Agates may also aid with the absorption of vitamins and minerals like Calcium, Zinc, Magnesium and vitamin A. Most importantly in healing, this gem teaches survival against all odds. No matter how mucky and gross things are right now, eventually everything crystallizes into perfection.

Reprinted from Ore’s Featured Gemstones – Turritella Agates

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Product/Vendor Review: Tucson 2009

The Tucson Gem & Mineral Show 2009 is just a week away. With thousands of vendors and hundreds of shows to choose from; where does one start. While attending Tucson 2008 I got to see and meet some very good vendors. Here is just a sample:

Lucky Gems & Jewelry Factory
Looking for quality and an incredible array of Pearls? Lucky Gems has the largest selection and very competitive pricing I’ve ever come across in the selection of Pearls. Freshwater cultured and even some saltwater pearls where to be found in colors, shapes and sizes that overcome the imitation. Check them out this year at three locations at Tucson 2009; Gem Mall, Quality Inn and the Holidome.

Kameyab Imports Inc.
Quality with large selection of exotic semi-precious gemstones from Peruvian Opals to Larimar, Kameyab has it all. Choose from a collection of pendants to many strands of your favorite gemstones and a huge selection of exotics. Visit them this year at 4 locations at Tucson 2009; JOGS, GLDA, Holidome, and AGTA.

Oriental Crest
Visit the world of many color gemstone beads. Browse through the selection of pearls, natural gemstones, strands and pendants. The JOGS show is their location at Tucson 2009.

Tucson Bead
For a selection of designer beads and unusual cuts in U.S. stones try Tucson Beads. Select from quality stones in Turquoise, Agate, Jasper and some additional unusual stones. Visit them at the Tucson Electric Park RV Gem Show at Tucson 2009.

Disclaimer: This is an independent product/vendor review based on our own research and experiences. We are in no way affiliated with the companys' or their agents.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Year Ends – What Do We Do Now?

Disclaimer: Please note that I am not an expert in owning a Business. This series is meant to solely provide information to the reader.

Business Series: Business Plan or Road Map
Ok, so now that you’ve paid your annual (or quartely depending on how you pay) Sales Tax, Business Tax, Use Tax, and any other ‘Tax” that Uncle Sam can come up with. What to do next with your business? There’s the budgets, strategies, new booth look or displays, website updates or what about more marketing? All these questions and not many answers. It’s this first part of the year where we all breath a little ‘sigh’ of relief and just ‘vacation’ until it’s too late. It’s all enough to make one’s head spin and decide to quit while you’re ahead.

The first question I’d ask, is when was the last time you looked at your business plan? (Right about now, you’re scratching your head and thinking ‘what business plan??’) Since the day you opened your doors (or internet site), you should have had some ‘plan’ to determine where you’re going, how you’re going to get there and what are your goals? Without some type of a ‘map or plan’ to get the answers, one’s business probably will grow at a much slower pace than anticiapted.

A really good business plan allows you to look at all of the big issues facing your business in a balanced analytical way. A good business plan helps you take full advantage of your strengths and helps you to discover your weaknesses. A good business plan (whatever type you choose) directs all your business activities in a solid cohesive direction.

Here’s a list of a few basic things to include in any business plan or roadmap:


*Vision/Mission Statement: List why you started your business and what your business means.
*Market Analysis: Look at your competitors; Brick & Morter, Internet, and Catalog (direct mail). Research their weaknesses and strengths so you know how your business stacks up against them.
*Financial Analysis: Startup money needed, budget for Marketing, Profit, Vendors, Materials, and Equpiment. Look at what type of profit and pricing structure you want to have in your business. List your finanical goals for the next year and then build on them year after year.
*Business Goals & Milestones: What are your business goals? What do you want to accomplish in the first few years? Where do you expect to be with your business in five years? Then set milestones to accomplish these goals; even if they are marketing goals, product goals, or even goals you have set for yourself. Small goals help us to achieve the larger goals that look to big to ever accomplish.


Whatever you do, put some things down in writing and then dig them out from time to time to review. Change as your business changes and you will see your successes and challenges much clearer. Don’t short-circuit your success by cheating yourself out of the roadmap to get there!

Disclaimer: Please note that I am not an expert in owning a Business. This series is meant to solely provide information to the reader.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Morocco Agate, Kamaba & Sandy Jasper, Butterscotch Quartz


A few more designs from the studio, a mix of natural gemstones with wire sculpture.


The first two designs feature Morocco Agate a very nice stone that is a conglomerate of colors; one design is 3 strands of floating gemstones; accented with glass pink lined seed beads. The second design features the same Agate but mixed with copper, Swarovski crystals, and freshwater cultured pearls. Both designs draw on the Morocco Agate, but give totally different looks when mixed with different combinations of beads, glass, crystals and colors.




The third design is mixing bold Kamaba Jasper with Butterscotch Quartz, Sandy Jasper and beige lined glass seed bead accents, and then finished with non-tarnish brass wire links.

You can see these and more of our new (and current) designs available for purchase on our website!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Countdown to Tucson 2009

It is almost here; Tucson 2009 Gem & Mineral Show!! In about a week, millions of people, thousands of vendors and hundreds of shows (most wholesale with a few open to the public) will mark the beginning of the largest show in the United States.







This is the venue to get your stock for the entire year, or even several years if you are one who purchases in bulk. Anything from raw stones (uncut, undrilled, unfinished, unpolished, etc), to finished and raw precious gems (diamonds, sapphires, and emeralds just to name a few), to silver-gold-copper-brass findings and stringing materials, storage containers, tools and equipment, jewelry and gifts, to show displays, bags, and boxes, and all the natural gemstones in cuts and types that are as unusual as the places they come from.


Over the next week I’ll be highlighting some of my favorite vendors and shows that will be at Tucson 2009; so bookmark and check back here all next week for a pre-view of Tucson 2009!


The Countdown Begins……….

Friday, January 23, 2009

Unusual & Exotic – Turritella Fossil Agate

Turritella Agate is not right. It is not an Agate, but more closely related to Jasper, like Petrified Wood. It is not a fossil of Turritella Gastropods, but a fossil of Elimia Tenera Gastropods. Elimia Tenera are fresh water snails (gastropods) that share a very similar shape to ocean born Turritellas. Which means these dear little crystal companions are in desperate need of a more appropriate name.

The story of these lively prehistoric gems begins in early Tertiery times (approximately 60 million years ago). A series of geological events were causing the uplifting of mountains that eventually would be known as the Rockies. As the land lifts upwards it forms three Eocene Age lakes in the area of Wyoming, Montana, Colorado and Utah. Geologists have named them the Fossil, Ulinta and Gosiute Lakes. Life thrived within the waters and along the shorelines of these lakes. Other fossilized material from the area shows that plant life, reptiles and fish flourished along with the millions of fresh water gastropods and bi-valves. During those long ago days, residents of the lakes enjoyed a subtropical climate, but also lived under the constant threat of volcanic eruptions.

Mortality layers containing volcanic ash throughout the area suggest that there were numerous cycles of life and extinction over the millennia. It was the violent eruptions of the nearby volcanos which helped to create a pristine environment for fossils to form. Whole schools of the primal Kenightia (looks like a Herring) fish have been found in the fossilized beds of the Eocene lakes. Palm Trees, Turtles and Crocodile imprints have been found along what would have been the lakes' shorelines. The poorly named gemstone, Turritella Agate comes from the floor of these primordial lakes. Continued eruptions and fallout from the region's volcanos allowed much of the lakes' bottoms to be buried in ash as the lakes retreated or dried up (geologists are not sure what really happened to the lakes).

Essentially the mud and everything in it became petrified; frozen in stone. Besides the mis-identified Elimia Tenera gastropods, these fossil crystals also contain prehistoric bi-valves called Pleisielliptio and Sphaerium. Other varieties of ancient snails like Hydrobia and Valvata, plus some rarer Biomphalaria and Lymnaea are also found in Turritella Agates. In Sweetwater County Wyoming the petrified lake floor is up to two feet thick covering several acres (and miles in some cases).

While Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and Montana are the only sources for Turritella Agates, there seems to be some evidence that other such deposits may exist on the planet. An archeological dig in the Czech Republic revealed beads containing fossils of Gastropods that are almost 30,000 years old.

Traditional Properties & Beliefs
All Fossils are very well tuned for journeying into past lives. The extra high energy in the Turritella Agate adds a turbo boost to your journey. The abundance of frozen life within a single gem helps you to "see" clearer and understand more quickly the impressions and images you receive during your journey.

Are you having trouble solidifying a solution to a nagging problem? Every time you reach for the answer it slips away? Or you get bogged down in your own muddy thoughts and emotions? Try a quiet meditation with this dark crystal. Its long ago past was also muddy and slippery. Anytime something moved upon the surface, muck was stirred up and vision was clouded. You see this same entity today, everything is crystal clear. Every curve of every snail or clam is easy to see, easy to understand, easy to deal with. Just like problems, if we are patient and allow time for the dust to settle.
An excellent crystal for healing and clearing the Base and Crown Chakra. It may also increase physical energy, especially when the body is being challenged by fatigue or stress. Turritella Agates may also aid with the absorption of vitamins and minerals like Calcium, Zinc, Magnesium and vitamin A. Most importantly in healing, this gem teaches survival against all odds. No matter how mucky and gross things are right now, eventually everything crystallizes into perfection.

Reprinted from Ore’s Featured Gemstones – Turritella Agates

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Product/Vendor Review: Tucson 2009

The Tucson Gem & Mineral Show 2009 is just a week away. With thousands of vendors and hundreds of shows to choose from; where does one start. While attending Tucson 2008 I got to see and meet some very good vendors. Here is just a sample:

Lucky Gems & Jewelry Factory
Looking for quality and an incredible array of Pearls? Lucky Gems has the largest selection and very competitive pricing I’ve ever come across in the selection of Pearls. Freshwater cultured and even some saltwater pearls where to be found in colors, shapes and sizes that overcome the imitation. Check them out this year at three locations at Tucson 2009; Gem Mall, Quality Inn and the Holidome.

Kameyab Imports Inc.
Quality with large selection of exotic semi-precious gemstones from Peruvian Opals to Larimar, Kameyab has it all. Choose from a collection of pendants to many strands of your favorite gemstones and a huge selection of exotics. Visit them this year at 4 locations at Tucson 2009; JOGS, GLDA, Holidome, and AGTA.

Oriental Crest
Visit the world of many color gemstone beads. Browse through the selection of pearls, natural gemstones, strands and pendants. The JOGS show is their location at Tucson 2009.

Tucson Bead
For a selection of designer beads and unusual cuts in U.S. stones try Tucson Beads. Select from quality stones in Turquoise, Agate, Jasper and some additional unusual stones. Visit them at the Tucson Electric Park RV Gem Show at Tucson 2009.

Disclaimer: This is an independent product/vendor review based on our own research and experiences. We are in no way affiliated with the companys' or their agents.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Year Ends – What Do We Do Now?

Disclaimer: Please note that I am not an expert in owning a Business. This series is meant to solely provide information to the reader.

Business Series: Business Plan or Road Map
Ok, so now that you’ve paid your annual (or quartely depending on how you pay) Sales Tax, Business Tax, Use Tax, and any other ‘Tax” that Uncle Sam can come up with. What to do next with your business? There’s the budgets, strategies, new booth look or displays, website updates or what about more marketing? All these questions and not many answers. It’s this first part of the year where we all breath a little ‘sigh’ of relief and just ‘vacation’ until it’s too late. It’s all enough to make one’s head spin and decide to quit while you’re ahead.

The first question I’d ask, is when was the last time you looked at your business plan? (Right about now, you’re scratching your head and thinking ‘what business plan??’) Since the day you opened your doors (or internet site), you should have had some ‘plan’ to determine where you’re going, how you’re going to get there and what are your goals? Without some type of a ‘map or plan’ to get the answers, one’s business probably will grow at a much slower pace than anticiapted.

A really good business plan allows you to look at all of the big issues facing your business in a balanced analytical way. A good business plan helps you take full advantage of your strengths and helps you to discover your weaknesses. A good business plan (whatever type you choose) directs all your business activities in a solid cohesive direction.

Here’s a list of a few basic things to include in any business plan or roadmap:


*Vision/Mission Statement: List why you started your business and what your business means.
*Market Analysis: Look at your competitors; Brick & Morter, Internet, and Catalog (direct mail). Research their weaknesses and strengths so you know how your business stacks up against them.
*Financial Analysis: Startup money needed, budget for Marketing, Profit, Vendors, Materials, and Equpiment. Look at what type of profit and pricing structure you want to have in your business. List your finanical goals for the next year and then build on them year after year.
*Business Goals & Milestones: What are your business goals? What do you want to accomplish in the first few years? Where do you expect to be with your business in five years? Then set milestones to accomplish these goals; even if they are marketing goals, product goals, or even goals you have set for yourself. Small goals help us to achieve the larger goals that look to big to ever accomplish.


Whatever you do, put some things down in writing and then dig them out from time to time to review. Change as your business changes and you will see your successes and challenges much clearer. Don’t short-circuit your success by cheating yourself out of the roadmap to get there!

Disclaimer: Please note that I am not an expert in owning a Business. This series is meant to solely provide information to the reader.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Morocco Agate, Kamaba & Sandy Jasper, Butterscotch Quartz


A few more designs from the studio, a mix of natural gemstones with wire sculpture.


The first two designs feature Morocco Agate a very nice stone that is a conglomerate of colors; one design is 3 strands of floating gemstones; accented with glass pink lined seed beads. The second design features the same Agate but mixed with copper, Swarovski crystals, and freshwater cultured pearls. Both designs draw on the Morocco Agate, but give totally different looks when mixed with different combinations of beads, glass, crystals and colors.




The third design is mixing bold Kamaba Jasper with Butterscotch Quartz, Sandy Jasper and beige lined glass seed bead accents, and then finished with non-tarnish brass wire links.

You can see these and more of our new (and current) designs available for purchase on our website!