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  2. Bracelet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bracelet

    A decorative gold charm bracelet showing a heart-shaped locket, seahorse, crystal, telephone, bear, spaceship, and grand piano. Chain mail bracelet, in Byzantine weave, with silver-plated copper rings and green aluminium rings. A bracelet is an article of jewellery that is worn around the wrist. Bracelets may serve different uses, such as being ...

  3. Friendship bracelet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendship_bracelet

    It is customary to tie a bracelet around a friend's wrist as a token of friendship and to make a wish at that same moment. The bracelet should be worn until it is totally worn out and falls off by itself to honour the hard work and love put into making it. The moment at which the band falls off on its own, the wish is supposed to come true. [10]

  4. Timeline of Irish inventions and discoveries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Irish...

    Irish inventions and discoveries are objects, processes or techniques which owe their existence either partially or entirely to an Irish person. Often, things which are discovered for the first time, are also called "inventions", and in many cases, there is no clear line between the two.

  5. Jewellery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewellery

    One particularly popular type of design at this time was a bracelet decorated with snake and animal-heads Because these bracelets used considerably more metal, many examples were made from bronze. By 300 BC, the Greeks had mastered making coloured jewellery and using amethysts, pearl, and emeralds.

  6. Charm bracelet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charm_bracelet

    In 1889, Tiffany and Co. introduced their first charm bracelet — a link bracelet with a single heart dangling from it, a bracelet which is an iconic symbol for Tiffany today. [citation needed] Despite the Great Depression, during the 1920s and 1930s platinum and diamonds were introduced to charm bracelet manufacturing.

  7. Gold working in the Bronze Age British Isles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_working_in_the_Bronze...

    In Ireland, lunulae were probably replaced as neck ornaments firstly by gold torcs, found from the Irish Middle Bronze Age, and then in the Late Bronze Age by the spectacular "gorgets" of thin ribbed gold, some with round discs at the side, of which 9 examples survive, 7 in the National Museum of Ireland.

  8. European Union trade mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_trade_mark

    The EU trade mark may also take the form of a collective trade mark: properly applied, the regulation governing the use of the collective trade mark guarantees the origin, the nature and the quality of goods and services by making them distinguishable, which is beneficial to members of the association or body owning the trade mark. [2]

  9. Ionized jewelry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionized_jewelry

    An Ionized bracelet, or ionic bracelet, is a type of metal bracelet jewelry purported to affect the chi of the wearer. No claims of effectiveness made by manufacturers have ever been substantiated by independent sources, and the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has found the bracelets are "part of a scheme devised to defraud".