Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Jewelry brand - How to distinguish natural beeswax from pressed beeswax?
How to distinguish natural beeswax from pressed beeswax?
Beeswax is another variety of amber, which is named after its color like honey and texture like wax. Beeswax has a long history in China, and it is one of the seven treasures of Buddhism, which shows its preciousness. With the enrichment of material life and the imbalance of spiritual world, beeswax is more and more sought after and loved by many people. However, with the increasing audience of beeswax, a large number of unscrupulous merchants began to emerge in the market, making all kinds of imitation beeswax and shoddy it. In the face of this chaotic market, it is a headache for novice players who have just started.

Today, good shops mainly talk about a common trick in this beeswax fraud: suppressing beeswax. This kind of deception is the simplest and most gullible deception for beginners. So how to distinguish natural beeswax from pressed beeswax? A good store will remind you of the following points:

1. Watch carefully when starting.

Compared with natural beeswax, pressed beeswax has great subtle differences, in which the pressed beeswax has regular shape and consistent size, which can be observed by naked eyes, and the traces of pressing can be seen by careful observation.

2. Differences between colors

Almost all pressed beeswax is extremely uniform in color, with no difference in depth, and the inside and outside colors are the same. Generally speaking, the true natural beeswax can not achieve such perfect color uniformity, and because the skin of natural beeswax has been in contact with air for a long time, its appearance and interior have obvious color difference.

3. The difference between streamline

If you have a special purple flashlight to identify jewelry, you can clearly observe the streamline of pressing beeswax in the dark, which is obvious and unnatural. Under the microscope, pressing beeswax has that kind of suture, which is obvious.

4. Do you have a certificate?

This is the last means to identify beeswax. Generally, those who can't issue an appraisal certificate are basically false. Don't believe the story of the merchant that "this jewelry has just been designed and hasn't been certified yet". Of course, certificates can also be forged. You'd better check the authenticity of the certificate online when you buy it. Haojiadian Jewelry dianja.com Wanwen Special Issue