Unusual Jewellery - Great For Virtually Any Superstar

By Adrian Jones


Cute Jewellery Sparkles Bright Like any Crazy Diamond

It happens to be in excess of Fifty years since Orkney commenced producing cute jewellery. The very first styles were deemed unusual jewellery during that time. So Orkney jewellers have been completely on the cutting edge of designer jewellery for more than fifty years now. At one time, Celtic and Mackintosh motifs were also regarded as groundbreaking and radical: but over the years they have become a little more mainstream therefore they are no longer considered as unusual jewellery.

One of the most unusual jewellery items is the North Star collection. There is a great collection of designs, covering anything from a classic bracelet to a pendant, necklace and three types of earrings. These items of cute jewellery can be purchased in gold or silver. Gold pieces should be ordered ahead of time because they're made to order. Whichever you choose will be stylish and modern. Shining clear and bright, the North Star is a huge leading light for centuries for navigators and stargazers: the most important star in the night sky. Crystal clear, crisp modern lines complement the classic proportions of the design, suggesting glimmering points and curves of light.

The North Star is definitely a pole star, also known as called Polaris. This simply means it can be seen and it is approximately aligned correctly with the Earth's axis of rotation. Meaning it is actually viewed precisely over the North Pole. Orkney, where our unusual jewellery is made, might seem a long way north to most of the UK, but we are a long way south of viewing the North Star precisely overhead.

The south celestial pole lacks a dazzling star like Polaris to mark its position. Right now, the nearest star visible to the human eye will be the faint Sigma Octantis, which is commonly known as as the South Star.

Like we said earlier, Polaris is extremely useful for navigation - principally so in the times before there was GPS. While several other stars' apparent place in the sky change at night time, as they appear to rotate all around the celestial poles; the pole stars' apparent positions keep on being virtually fixed. This will make them specifically helpful in celestial navigation: they are simply a reliable sign of the direction toward the respective geographic pole although not exact; they're almost fixed, in addition their angle of elevation may also be used to establish latitude.

This can be a handy survival tool for figuring out direction without a compass. Visible via the surface of the Earth during clear nights, many people can easily find the North Star should they have to.

In ancient times locating this lodestar was essential to navigating long distances through the wilderness. The beauty of using the North Star for the navigation is the fact unlike a magnetic compass the North Star constantly points to true north. There's no magnetic declination to deal with.

Dazzling Lights Shine upon Unusual Jewellery

Having said that, pole stars do seemingly drift throughout the star field. Hence they are not entirely fixed. They do move in relation to other stars.

By coincidence, a yacht known as North Star was wrecked off the coast of the isle of Cava in Scapa Flow in Orkney in 1931.

Orkney was settled by the Norse, or in earlier days, Vikings, in the 8th century. The Norse had quite a few myths and tales with regards to the stars. One was called Vidofnir - a cock that is perched upon the highest possible branch of the World Tree. It actually was said that the Otherworld was to have been to the north and down, which will put it at the North Pole; the tree would've had its height at the axis where the tree rotates, which would mean Vidofnir probably will refer to Polaris, the North Star.

Which is one theory and there are many as you will discover few names for stars recorded in Old Norse, which had been the language spoken in the islands at the time "The Star" (stjarna) indicated the constellation of the Pleiades, useful for winter timekeeping at night.

Even so, to sailors "The Star" was the "lode-star" that many of us call the North Star or Polaris today. An additional school of thought could be that the same term might instead talk about Arcturus, the brightest star in the northern hemisphere, which has been also called the "wagon-star" because of its nearness to the constellation of The Wagon (Ursa Major).

No matter what Vikings named the North Star it's a bright star in the night in Orkney and throughout the Northern hemisphere, and still a handy tool to find direction north of you have no compass.

Unusual jewellery from the Orkney Isles featuring the North Star certainly makes a breathtaking piece of cute jewellery which will be respected and grabs the attention of people who see it - just like Polaris.




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