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Tips for General Care
Always separate your gold jewelry in a compartmentalized jewelry box. This protects against scratching.
Remove all jewelry before showering or cleaning. Soap can cause a film to form on karat gold jewelry, making it appear dull and dingy. By preventing the formation of this film, you immediately reduce the occasions your pieces will need to be cleaned.
Cleaning your Karat Gold Jewelry
To clean your jewelry at home, you'll find many commercial cleaners available. Ask your professional jeweler to recommend one for your jewelry. In addition, you will find a soft chamois cloth from any hardware store an effective and inexpensive way to keep your pieces lustrous and shining.
For certain gold jewelry, an 'ultrasonic' cleaning machine may be appropriate. The machine can be purchased in many retail outlets. Once again, ask your professional jeweler to advise you.
Remove tarnish with a prepared jewelry cleaner or by using soap and water mixed with a few drops of ammonia.
Brush with a soft bristle brush. An old toothbrush is perfect. After the soaping, simply rinse with lukewarm water and allow to dry.
Grease can be removed from karat gold jewelry by dipping the jewelry into plain rubbing alcohol.
Useful Tips Remove jewelry when applying makeup and face powder.
Wash hands after applying makeup and powder and before putting on jewelry. Keep your jewelry in a dry place.
Tips for General Care As with other precious metals, sterling silver will oxidize with time. Properly maintained, silver improves with age and develops a lush patina. Treat your silver well, care for it properly and it will reward you with a long life and lustrous look.
Do clean with a mild soap-and-water solution, allow water to bead up, and pat dry with a soft cloth. For more stubborn dirt, a jewelry cleaner labeled for silver use is appropriate.
Store your silver in a cool, dry place, preferably in a tarnish preventative bag or wrapped in a soft piece of felt or cloth. Store pieces individually so that they don't knock together and scratch.
Don't rub silver with anything other than a polishing cloth or fine piece of felt. Use of tissue paper or paper towels can cause scratches because of the fibers in these products.
Don't expose to air and light when storing because it will cause silver to tarnish. And, don't wear sterling silver in chlorine water.
Tips for General Care Cultured pearls are precious jewels and should be treated as such. Some tips:
Put on pearls after applying cosmetics, hair sprays and perfume, not before.
Don't toss them carelessly into a purse or jewel box where they can be scratched by hard metal edges or harder stones.
Place cultured pearl jewelry in a chamois bag or wrap them in tissue when putting them away.
Bring your pearls back to your jeweler for restringing once a year. Cosmetics and ordinary wear weaken and stretch the threads on which the pearls are strung. It's better to be safe than sorry.
Have pearls strung with a knot between each pearl. This will prevent loss of pearls if the string should break.
Cleaning Your Cultured Pearls
Don't clean cultured pearls with chemicals or abrasives.
Wash them with mild soap and water after taking them off. This will remove all traces of perfume, cosmetics, or hair spray from the pearls.
A mechanical watch should be checked regularly by your jeweler and serviced according to the manufacturer's suggestions. This is important because tiny particles of dust can get into the works, increasing friction of moving parts.
Wind your watch in a clockwise direction, preferably about the same time each day. Take it off your wrist so as not to place undue pressure on the stem.
Although many watches are equipped with shock-resistant devices, it's not wise to subject it to overly vigorous treatment.
Replace broken or scratched crystals immediately: even a hairline crack can let dust or moisture into the mechanism, threatening its accuracy.
Unless the degree of water-resistance was clearly specified when you bought your watch, don't risk wearing it into the shower or pool, or on a moist wrist.
No matter how handy you are, don't attempt any "do-it-yourself' watch repairs. Only an expert watchmaker should be trusted to put your watch back into working condition.
It's best to replace a battery in a quartz watch before it runs out. Dead batteries left in the watch can leak or corrode and ruin it. Also, don't attempt to change the battery in a watch yourself. Take it to a jeweler. batteries run for about two years. Those in some less expensive, multi-function digitals have shorter lives, as little as six months, if the wearer frequently uses extra features such as a calculator or game. Finally, if you have any questions, ask your jeweler. Your jeweler values you as a customer, and you should trust his/her judgment.
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