Necklace Urban Outfitters

Gunmetal Multichain Gunmetal Multichain "Messy Chains" Necklace with Faceted Amber Crystal Beacs
List Price: $49.99
Sale Price: $34.95

You'll never get these to hang straight -- they're not supposed to! (Although we do recommend you store them carefully or they'll get REALLY messy!) We LOVE this necklace - a great Victorian look, beautiful leaded glass crystal. They are carefully made in the USA at Alex Carol Jewelry, a small privately owned American company. Alex's designs change every season and are always the latest trend. See our store for more dark metals and the "new" "old gold look"

How can I get relief from a jewelry rash?

I got these two great necklaces the other day from Urban Outfitters and ever since I've worn them I have this nasty rash around my neck and on my chest. What's be best route for quick relief? And how can I make it go away over time, fast?

Sounds like you have an allergy to either the nickel in the center that was painted over, or the cheap plastic coat paint they covered it up with.
I would try benadryl as well as the topical rub. You can visit or call a local pharmacy and they can tell you the quickest working one.
Take the jewelry back.
First, make sure you emailed the company, (store you bought at) at the corporate office right from the website, with the information off the jewelry tags so they are aware of the crap they are selling. They could end up in a huge lawsuit; perhaps they will pull the stuff off their shelves and get a better quality of accessories, even if it isn't all 100% real.
As for you, stick with the fabric (leather or crochet strands) or sterling. If you have recently developed the rashes and all of your fake jewelry starts to bother you, you can easily apply a clear nail polish to earrings, rings, and chains. It will have to be re-applied over time.
Even glasses will make some people break out.

This year Tiffany\'s celebrates the 50th anniversary of Capote\'s novella which distinguished the jewellery brand across the globe. But fifty years on in a world where diamonte is the new diamond is there still room for a little blue box in our lives? As the credit crunch blocks your way to Cartier you have no choice but to look for viable alternatives and costume jewellery is fast becoming one of them. Dating back to the 1700\'s costume jewellery has been a part of fashion culture for more than 300 years, providing an inexpensive substitute to fine jewellery through the use of materials such as simulated gem stones rhinestone and plated brass. Greatly popularized by Coco Chanel, her collections often featured faux jewellery; she helped to reinvent its purpose as an investment to a fashion accessory.

Replacing gold with gold plated and pearl with pearl effect beads the crime of going \'fake\' has never been more accepted, and for what fashion jewellery lacks in precious materials, it makes up for in design. Most notably it is designer Kenneth Jay Lane who, since the 1960\'s been creating unique piece for the likes of Audrey Hepburn, that has led the way in breaking free from the conventional restrictions when it comes to jewellery design. Leaving chandelier earrings behind in favor of proportion defying necklaces and turquoise embellished cuffs. But possibly more excitingly is the wide range of costume jewellery available on the high street. Affordable, stylish and attention grabbing pieces, from Accessorize\'s cocktail rings to Urban Outfitters kitsch pendant necklaces, jewellery has become a statement of individuality.

And in this quest to find pieces that are unique, it is individual online boutiques that offer one of a kind and limited designs. Up and coming jewellery designers, often students from the likes of Parsons school of design and Central Saint Martins are swapping mass production for hand made and individually sourced jewellery and selling it online. Offering jewellery connoisseurs a chance to not only buy a one of a kind piece but to invest in the future of jewellery design.
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T smart for designer jewellery by flash trash

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Designer Jewellery in a recession

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