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What is the function of wearing jewelry besides beauty?
Jewelry's decorative function, taste and status symbol

Wearing jewelry to enhance one's image and temperament should be a primary and well-known function. Since primitive society, people have used animal teeth, bones, feathers or stones to wear and decorate. With the progress of social civilization and the improvement of people's quality of life, jewelry has become more and more diversified, and the attention to jewelry has become higher and higher.

"Jewelry" is the most primitive attribute of jewelry and the most basic function of jewelry. The choice and wearing of jewelry is a decorative art, just like wearing skills, which may be even more important than the clothing itself in many cases, and the wearing experience will play a icing on the cake. Moreover, jewelry is not a woman's patent, and a man's moderate choice and wearing can also highlight his own taste.

In social activities, jewelry is a silent language, which can not only show the wearer's knowledge, experience and aesthetic taste, but also show the education level and family education. Especially in western countries, wearing jewelry in social occasions can also be regarded as a social etiquette. Through mutual appreciation and interaction of jewelry, jewelry can give full play to its due role.

The expression of customs and good wishes, the embodiment of feelings

For example, Faberge jewelry eggs.

Eggs are traditional religious gifts of Easter in Orthodox countries, symbolizing rebirth and hope. Russia has always had the tradition of giving eggs to relatives. Conventional eggs have only literal meaning, that is, eggs with painted surfaces.

During the period of 1885, Mr. Faberge, a jeweler, was ordered by the czar to make a jewel egg (the first Faberge egg-the mother egg)-a "doll" egg, which was specially customized by the most powerful Russian czar Alexander III for his beloved woman Maria Feodor Fu Na. This "mother egg" not only made Queen Fu Na furious.

Since then, every year Tsar Alexander III kept an Easter egg for the Queen until her death in 1894. Nicholas II, the son of Alexander III, inherited the custom of the Romanov family. Every year, Alexandra Feodor Fu Na and his wife Alexandra Feodor Fu Na present an egg of Faberge. This tradition was not broken until the Tsar was overthrown by the revolution in 19 17. Faberge ordered a total of 50 eggs for the Tsar family. These eggs have different shapes and exquisite skills, which not only reflect Faberge's extraordinary skills and imagination, but also record the glory enjoyed by the Russian Empire from the end of 19 to the beginning of the 20th century, as well as the bumpy legend. Therefore, this series of Faberge eggs is called Imperial Easter Eggs, which explains the value and charm of an antique jewelry from four different angles: material, design, craft and feelings.