Citrine and Pink Tourmaline Halo Pear Dangle earrings in 14K Yellow Gold

The epitome of elegance and style, these 14K Yellow Gold honey orange citrine and pink tourmaline earrings feature 32 dazzling diamonds for a total of .51 carats of diamonds, sparkling in 14K Yellow Gold. Perfect for that upscale occasion, the brilliance of these earrings will capture every eye in the room. Citrine is known as the gem of optimism and renewal and is the birthstone for the month of November. Pink Tourmaline is known as the gem of empathy and creativity and is the birthstone for the month of October.

Style #: E1882-YCTTU
Top Gems: Genuine Citrine
small citrine pear icon
small citrine pear icon
  • 5 x 3 mm Pear
  • 0.40 total carats (0.20 x 2)
  • AA Quality
  • eye-clean
  • Origin: Brazil
Bottom Gems: Genuine Pink Tourmaline
small tourmaline pear icon
small tourmaline pear icon
  • 6 x 4 mm Pear
  • 0.80 total carats (0.40 x 2)
  • AA Quality
  • eye-clean
  • Origin: Brazil
Genuine Diamonds: .50 carats
6
diamond icon
1.7mm Round D-G SI2
26
diamond icon
1.5mm Round D-G SI2
retail price: $ 1,557.00
Jewels for Me
Manufacturer Direct
Price:
$824.00
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I love the earrings...they are just beautiful! Looked even better than online.

brenda ford j.
Houston, TX
Sunday, February 16, 2014

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Good seller, honest, fast shipping

Caroline P
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Learn more about:

citrine Jewelry

Citrine has been popular for thousands of years and used to be revered for its rarity, though that has changed with time. The ancient Romans used it for beautiful jewelry and intaglio work. It was also very popular for jewelry in the 19th century. During the Art Deco period between World Wars I and II, large citrines were set in many prized pieces, including the massive and elaborate Art Deco inspired jewelry pieces made for big Hollywood stars such as Greta Garbo and Joan Crawford.... learn more

tourmaline Jewelry

Tourmaline is the alternate birthstone for October, along with the opal. The stone was first discovered by Dutch traders off the West Coast of Italy in the late 1600's or early 1700's. The name tourmaline comes from the Sinhalese term "turmali,"" which was the name given to all colored crystals on the island of Sri Lanka at that time. This all inclusive name indicates the inability of ancient gem dealers to differentiate tourmaline from other stones. In fact, at one time in history, pink and red... learn more