Beaded Jewelry
Beaded Fashion Jewelry

Our Beaded jewelry are unique and affordable. Choose a few beaded jewelry that will work with your favorite outfits. We Provide you a selective yet vast
range of beaded jewelry. All beaded jewelry are handmade and for wholesale supply only.
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Beaded jewelry is just one of the arenas where polymer clay
stretches the artist's imagination to create an exciting selection
of components for jewelry designers.
India offers a wide range of design, concept, colors and price
range for beaded jewelry. Please visit our website for designer
collection of beaded earring, beaded opense, beaded hair clip,
beaded nose pin, beaded necklace, beaded armlet, beaded
bracelet, beaded belt and beaded anklets.  
Our Designers produce beautiful designs and skilled workers
replicate them in desired or ordered quantity. Since all of our
fashion jewelry are handmade, a slight variation in every two
piece is imminent.
Wholesale prices depends upon the quantity and quality of job
ordered. Prices are also influenced by flactuation of raw material
cost.
Beads, small perforated objects, usually spherical, that may be strung into necklaces and bracelets or attached to
clothing or furnishings. The word bead is derived from Middle English bede, meaning “prayer,” and was originally
applied to prayer beads, or rosaries. Beads are made of a variety of materials: seeds, wood, ivory, bone, horn, shell,
coral, pearl, jet, amber, gemstones, metals, ceramics, and plastics. They were worn in the Stone Age—and still are in
traditional communities—as amulets or charms, probably because magical properties were attributed to the
materials of which they were made. Beads have also been worn since early times for decoration. Easily portable, they
have, in addition, been objects of exchange.

Archaeological finds reveal that a variety of gold bead necklaces were worn in ancient Mesopotamia and India.
Egyptian nobles favored wide collars of colored gemstone, ceramic, or glass beads. Byzantine courtiers and Mughal
Indian nobility wore ropes of pearls. In Europe, pearls and also glass beads, manufactured since the 13th century,
were popular both for jewelry and embroidery. Women wore strings of pearls, first real, later artificial, a fashion that
continued into the 20th century. Hundreds of tiny glass beads or seed pearls were embroidered on dresses, church
vestments, small pictures, boxes, and baskets or were strung and knitted into ladies' purses or used as fringe on
dresses and lampshade.

Native North Americans and tribal Africans wore strings of small beads and embroidered beads on their clothes and
bags as, for example, the skin tunics of the Inuit and the aprons of the Nubile. Africans also trimmed headdresses
with beads and covered vessels and stools with them. In addition, beads were used for money as, for example, shell
wampum on the east coast of North America. Originally the beads were made from natural materials such as shell;
subsequently they were replaced by glass beads obtained from European traders.
Bone Jewelry we can deliver
Head ornaments
crowns
circlets
coronets
diadems
tiaras
earrings
magnetic earrings
clip-on earrings
earcuffs
nose-jewels
body piercing jewellery
non-piercing body jewellery
Hair ornaments
hairpins
Special functions
celibacy vow rings
signet rings
thumb rings
puzzle rings
medical alert jewellery
mourning jewellery
amulets
prayer jewellery
japa malas
prayer beads
prayer ropes
rosary beads
puzzle jewellery
Arms
armlets (upper arm bracelets)
bracelets
cuff links
Components
cameos
emblems
lockets
medallions
pendants
Findings
Neck
necklaces
chokers
Legs and Feet
thighbands
anklets (ankle bracelets)
toe rings  
Hands
rings
promise rings
engagement rings
wedding rings
class rings
championship rings
Body
belly chains
brooches
chatelaines
Color options that can be used with Bone Jewelry.
Alice Blue
Alizarin Crimson
Amber
Amethyst
Asparagus
Aqua
Aquamarine
Azure
Beige
Bistre
Black
Blue
Bondi Blue
Brass
Bright green
Bright turquoise
Bright violet
Bronze
Brown
Buff
Burgundy
Burnt Orange
Burnt Sienna
Burnt umber
Camouflage green
Cardinal
Carmine
Carrot
Celadon
Cerise
Cerulean
Cerulean blue
Chartreuse
Chestnut
Chocolate
Cinnamon
Cobalt
Copper
Coral
Corn
Cornflower blue
Cream
Crimson
Cyan
Dark blue
Dark brown
Dark cerulean
Dark chestnut
Dark coral
Dark goldenrod
Dark green
Dark Indigo
Dark Khaki
Dark Olive
Dark pastel green
Dark Peach
Dark pink
Dark salmon
Dark Scarlet
Dark slate gray
Dark spring green
Dark tan
Dark tangerine
Dark Tea Green
Dark Terra cotta
Dark turquoise
Dark violet
Denim
Dodger blue
Emerald
Eggplant
Fern green
Flax
Fuchsia
Gamboge
Gold
Goldenrod
Gray
Gray-asparagus
Gray-Tea Green
Green
Green-yellow
Heliotrope
Hot pink
Indigo
International Klein Blue
International orange
Jade
Khaki
Khaki (X11)
Lavender
Lavender Blush
Lemon
Lemon Cream
Light brown
Lilac
Lime
Linen
Magenta
Malachite
Maroon
Mauve
Midnight Blue
Mint Green
Moss green
Mountbatten pink
Mustard
Navajo white
Navy blue
Ochre
Old Gold
Olive
Olive Drab
Orange
Orchid
Pale Blue
Pale brown
Pale carmine
Pale chestnut
Pale cornflower blue
Pale magenta
Pale mauve
Pale pink
Pale red-violet
Pale Sandy Brown
Papaya whip
Pastel green
Pastel pink
Peach
Peach-orange
Peach-yellow
Pear
Periwinkle
Persian blue
Pine Green
Pink
Pink-orange
Plum
Powder blue
Puce
Prussian blue
Pumpkin
Purple
Raw umber
Red
Red-violet
Robin egg blue
Royal Blue
Russet
Rust
Safety Orange (Blaze Orange)
Saffron
Sapphire
Salmon
Sandy brown
Sangria
Scarlet
School bus yellow
Sea Green
Seashell
Selective yellow
Sepia
Silver
Slate gray
Spring Green
Steel blue
Swamp green
Tan
Taupe
Tenné
Tangerine
Tea Green
Teal
Terra cotta
Thistle
Turquoise
Ultramarine
Vermilion
Violet
Violet-eggplant
Viridian
Wheat
White
Wisteria
Yellow
Zinnwaldite
Material used in Bone jewelry
Agate
Alexandrite
Alloys
Aluminium
Aluminium oxide
Amber
Amethyst
Ammolite
Andalusite
Aquamarine
Aquamarine (blue)
Axinite
Beads
Benitoite
Beryl
Bixbite (red)
Bixbyte (Red beryl)
Bone
Brass
Bronze
Cardinal gems
Cassiterite
Chrysoberyl
Chrysocolla
Chrysoprase
Citrine
Clinohumite
Coal
Coins
Copper
Coral
Corundum
Cubic
Cubic crystal
Cubic zirconia
Diamond
Duralumin
Emerald
Emerald (green)
Enamel glass
Feldspar (moonstone)
Fish scales
Fused glass
Garnet
Gemstones
Glass
Gold
Goshenite (colorless)
Heliodor (yellow)
Hematite
Horn
Iolite
Iron
Ivory
Jade - jadeite and nephrite
Jasper
Jet
Jet (lignite)
Kornerupine
Kunzite
Sugilite
Tanzanite
Tiger's-eye
Titanium
Topaz
Tortoiseshell
Tourmaline
Trigonal
Turquoise
Uranium
Wood
Zeolite (Thomsonite)

Zinc
Zircon
Zoisite
Lapis lazuli
Malachite
Moissanite
Monoclinic
Morganite (pink)
Mother of pearl
Natural clay
Natural moissanite
Nickel
Obsidian
Octahedrons
Olivine (Peridot)
Opal (Girasol)
Palladium
Pearl
Plasticine clays
Platinum
Polymer clay
Pyrite
Quartz
Rhodochrosite
Rubies
Ruby
Sapphire
Seed beads
Shells
Silver
Spinel
Steel
Sterling silver
Looking for Wholesale Dealers for our Bone jewelry in following location
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