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  2. Lapidary club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapidary_club

    Lapidary clubs promote popular interest and education in lapidary, the craft of working, forming and finishing stone, minerals and gemstones. These clubs sponsor and provide means for their members to engage in all forms of jewellery making , cabochon cutting and faceting , carving , glass beadmaking and craft work.

  3. Lapidary Journal Jewelry Artist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapidary_Journal_Jewelry...

    The Lapidary Journal Jewelry Artist is an American magazine dedicated to lapidary interests such as gemology, jewelry design, metalworking, mineralogy, rocks, and gemstones. The magazine was established in 1947 as the Lapidary Journal , and was renamed to its current title in 2005.

  4. Lizzadro Museum of Lapidary Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Lizzadro_Museum_of_Lapidary_Art

    The lapidary arts form the core of the Lizzadro Museum's collections, particularly jade carvings including the Altar of the Green Jade Pagoda by Chang Wen-Ti. [7] However, the museum also displays a selection of uncarved gemstones, fossils, and other minerals, as well as sculptures, mosaics, dioramas, and a miniature castle made of carved stone and gold called "Castle Lizzadro" by William ...

  5. Mineral and Lapidary Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_and_Lapidary_Museum

    The Mineral and Lapidary Museum of Henderson County is a non-profit, volunteer-run museum in Hendersonville, North Carolina, United States, founded in 1997 at 400 North Main Street in the middle of the city's Historic District.

  6. Tumble finishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumble_finishing

    A collection of gemstone pebbles. Most of these stones, except four rough ones, were tumbled and polished. Tumbling of rocks as a lapidary technique for rock polishing usually requires a plastic or rubber-lined barrel loaded with a consignment of rocks, all of similar or the same hardness, some abrasive grit, and a liquid lubricant.

  7. Lapidary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapidary

    Lapidary (from the Latin lapidarius) is the practice of shaping stone, minerals, or gemstones into decorative items such as cabochons, engraved gems (including cameos), and faceted designs. A person who practices lapidary techniques of cutting, grinding, and polishing is known as a lapidary or lapidarist.

  8. Estense Lapidary Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estense_Lapidary_Museum

    View of the Roman section with sarcophagi, inscriptions and sculptures displayed around the open courtyard of the museum.. The museum was built around an initial nucleus of antique stone objects already present within the Estense collection, thanks to Alfonso II d'Este's Ferrarese antique-dealer and Renaissance humanist Cardinal Rodolfo Pio da Carpi, who harboured a collection of Roman bronze ...

  9. Lapidary medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapidary_Medicine

    Lapidary medicine is a pseudoscientific concept based on the belief that gemstones have healing properties. The source of the idea of lapidary medicine stems from information found in lapidaries , books giving "information about the properties and virtues of precious and semi-precious stones."