Has it been exposed to Mercury. Mercury will bind to gold and you have to have a jeweler fix it.
14kt is obviously "14 karat" indicating purity. The CH is probably the manufacturer's mark.
It depends on the quality of the aquamarine gemstones and the material or metal that the bracelet is made of. 14kt gold, 18 kt gold, 22 kt gold and platinum are very valuable metals, while silver, 9 kt gold, gold plate, and steel are less valuable metals. The bracelet will also be more valuable if it was created by a famous jewelry designer or is antique. The best resource for knowing the value is to have it appraised by a trusted jeweler.
Pure gold is 24 kt. 14 kt gold is (14/24)=.5833 pure. Multiply by 100 and it is 58.33% pure.
It depends on what the ring is made out of. (e.g. gold, silver, platinum, ruby, sapphire, etc.)
the higher the number the better
No, sometimes there is also 24 kt gold.
They both contain 14/24ths or 58.5% of gold, alloyed with other metals, and the choice of alloy metal makes it the desired colour, white (alloyed with silver), yellow (silver/copper) or rose/red (copper). Other metals like manganese, aluminium, iron, indium and other elements are also used less commonly.
I know that "kt" is the symbol for karat, which is the measure of how much gold there actually is in the alloy of metal that your bracelet's made out of. I don't know what the j is for though.
It stands for 14 kt gold and the piece is from Europe usually .That is the national symbol to say it is 14 kt gold .
14 kt gold
Yes! I have theese small pearl 14 KT. earrings and I wore them for about 4 months straight after I got my ears pierced, and they are now black. they whole stem of hte earring(the part that you put in your ear) had theese samall black patches. Other jewelry like necklaces and braclets don't though usually if it is high quality
Yes, it will easily bend and break over time.