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nrlh Report: 27% of Americans think poor are lazy
« le: Janvier 01, 2025, 09:43:14 am »
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 For hundreds of years, people wore mourning jewelry to commemorate their dead loved ones. But what secrets about the past can you learn from these dark baubles made of diamonds, skeletons and bits of loved ones ; hair.     We stumbled upon Erica Weiner   wondrous collection of mourning jewelry while window browsing through New York, and the collector and jewelry designer was kind enough to give us an education on the intricate history and secret meanings behind the jet-black jewelry that   been around since the 1600s  but sa stanley cup w a tremendous rise in popularity in the 1800s . Ac botella stanley cording to Weiner, People started making memorial jewelry because there was no photography, and if your loved one died you wanted something as a touchstone to remember them every day. You could also get a painting made of your loved one, and lat stanley mug er on there was a fad in death photography 鈥?but before photography came along, this was the main way that people remembered their departed loved ones. These items weren ;t limited to women, either; men could have memorial cufflinks or pocket watch fobs with parts of the deceased person   hair braided in  image below . Men   watch with a hair braided FOB Image via ebay.  As far as materials go, black enamel is the hallmark of most mourning pieces. But different metals and gems have different meanings. Weiner elaborated that white enamel means the deceased was a woman who died unmarried and a virgin. Pearl