Friday, June 5, 2009

Fashion and color coordination can make or break your carefuly planned outfit.

Personalizing the ancient jewellery by engraving Arabic on items is a splendid aerodynamic form which is similar to English handwriting. Defining the primary source of gold used in a particular piece of jewellery is therefore virtually impossible. Well, primaries and secondaries together give us complementary colors.

A silver bowl from around the 5th century BC can be found inthe Metropolitan Museum of Art showing a fine flower style. There are different pieces which allow the compounding of two different languages. The social value that the gold mining industry adds to societies around the world, especially poorer countries, is very important.

This type of work, elaborated in the Hellenistic Age and particularly at Antioch and Alexandria, remained the common method of decoration for silver articles until the end of the Roman Empire. Gold mining is vital to the fragile economies of many developing countries, which account for a large share of global gold production. The complement of the color is the color directly across from it on the color wheel, or if starting with a primary, the color made from mixing the other two primaries.

For instance, cartouches which are double sided, on one side the name can be written in Arabic and on other side in Egyptian hieroglyphs. Silver vases and toilet articles have been found beside the more common bronze in Etruscan tombs. So essentially a color and its complement contain all of the primaries between them.

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