I’m looking, in Europe, for sculptors, handcrafts, jewellery lapidary who work quartz?
I have green precious rough stones, with different shape and thickness, as they were got from the mine. They have sparkling inclusions that produce reflections causing a glittering effect.They have fuchsita inclusions. Are filled with small lustrous specks that refelct light.Are used for jewellery, carving, sculptures, spheres, landscape projects or decorative fountains. If wet or polished is greenest.Is also used for gravel for aquarium because when wet is greenest or either conglomerate stones (artificial)
Am in Australia working with similar sounding stones which maybe serpentines (fuchsite green mica inclusion) beware as they can contain fibrous asbestos often as white veins that can be loosened easily and pose respiratory hazard. The stone can also be used for terrazzo and ground finely as paint pigment.
Wheel Burs have cutting flutes along their outside edge as well as the top surface. They are perfectly suited for removing material from a thick bezel when setting a cabochon.
Sold in Pack of 6 Burs
Made in Switzerland…
Lost science of the soul: Breaking the Reptilian Code. Another 2012 prediction. Believe it?
Beyond creation, life, death, truth & even immortality there is only one great cosmic secret. The secret of the Stargate or Wormhole, a universal transportation system known to the enlightened seers or Shamans of Sumerian, biblical, Egyptian & other primordial cultures. Mayan prophecy predicts that this lost knowledge will be rediscovered by the year 2012, marking the dawn of a new age, the birth of a new type of human, & a shift in the matrix of reality. What do you think of this? A lot of talk about what 2012 will bring. Have you heard of this before?
The bulk of the current events discussing 2012 is the Mayan calendar and that the world will end in 2012. The main problem that I see is the Mayans were neither Greek nor Roman and the calendar that we use today is the Gregorian calendar which is based on the Greco-Roman calendar. They (the Mayans) didn’t use the exact same date (the time of the birth of Christ) as the Romans did for the year 1. The Mayans were destroyed centuries before the Spanish came to the Americas.
Different cultures have differing calendars. According to the Jewish calendar we are over the year 6000. (I’m not real sure the exact year)
The Chinese calendar is also well above the year 2007.
The problem is people are using an ancient calendar system and trying to convert it to the Gregorian calendar system and say, “See this proves the world will end at such and such time.”
It is not our job to figure out when the world will end, but to be prepared and to prepare others for the time that it will end.
The Mayan New Dawn Dr.Carl Johan Calleman interviews Don Alejandro a Mayan Shaman
Copal is sacred to the indigenous cultures of the Central and South Americas. It is burned year round in the churches in Mexico, but is best known for its use in the homes during Day of the Dead. It is said that the familiar scent of Copal helps the souls find their way back during their annual visit home. This copal has a light, sweet and very pleasant aroma. It uses can be for inspiration, attra…
Embark on all-new adventures in Treasures of Mystery Island 2: The Gates of Fate, a sequel that’s bigger, better, and more stunning than the original! This Special Bonus Edition also includes 3 more exciting adventures – Hamlet, Joan Jade and The Gates of Xibala, and Treasures Of Montezuma 2. Enjoy all 4 thrilling adventures for one incredible price! In Treasures of Mystery Island 2, the Shaman ho…
This documentary film looks at the nearest contemporary equivalent to an Ancient Maya city where traditional shaman priests continue to carry out rituals as the mediators between this world and the world of the sacred. The balancing of the cosmos is dependent on their prayers and actions. This film is not Apocalyptic! It doesn’t refer to our culture’s fantasies or longings about 2012 as an end …
Twenty-five years ago, a young musician and painter named Martin Prechtel wandered through the brilliant landscapes of Mexico and Guatemala. Arriving at Santiago Atitlan, a Tzutujil Mayan village on the breathtaking shores of Lake Atitlan, Prechtel met Nicolas Chiviliu Tacaxoy–perhaps the most famous shaman in Tzutujil history–who believed Prechtel was the new student he had asked the gods to pr…
The compelling drama of American herbologist Rosita Arvigo’s quest to preserve the knowledge of Don Elijio Panti, one of the last surviving and most respected traditional healers in the rainforest of Belize….