mother-of-pearl
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Assorted References
- Cheju Island
- In Jeju Island
…which furnishes a special iridescent mother-of-pearl used for inlaid lacquer. Skilled women divers, called haenyeo (“sea women”), gather seaweed and shellfish. In the early 21st century, controversy erupted over the construction of a South Korean naval base on the southern coast. Area, including 26 small associated islands, 714 square miles…
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- In Jeju Island
- use in furniture
- In furniture: Other materials
Mother-of-pearl has been used, particularly as inlay material and for keyhole escutcheons. Marble and, to a certain extent, plaster of paris have been used, especially in the 18th century, for the tops of chests of drawers and console tables, and in the 19th century for…
Read More - In furniture: China
…wood pieces either inlaid with mother-of-pearl or elaborately carved, and plain hardwood pieces.
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- In furniture: Other materials
occurrence in
- mollusks
- oysters
- In oyster
…oysters by the accumulation of nacre, the material lining the oyster shell, around a solid piece of foreign matter that has become lodged inside the shell. Pearls formed in edible oysters are lustreless and of no value. The best natural pearls occur in a few Oriental species, particularly Meleagrina vulgaris,…
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- In oyster
- seashells