Exquisite Jewelry Boxes of Distinction Below Retail

Hello Fine diamond jewelry should be protected and stored in beautiful jewelry boxes made to last for generations. The jewelry box should be as exquisite as the jewelry itself.

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offers a full line of jewelry boxes by Mele, the foremost name in jewelry boxes since

1912. You can find gorgeous oak, cherry, walnut, white wood, lacquer, leather, musical, ballerina, lock and key jewelry boxes, all at well below retail prices.
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provides high quality craftsmanship and superior customer service. There is a special unbeatable deal offered every month on the website. Please come visit us. You'll be glad you did.

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------------------------------------------------------------=AD---------Anna Samantha

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Because Your Jewelry Deserves It!!!!

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Reply to
cherishlane
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This stuff really looks like something you would order from Drake or buy from K-Mart.

1912. You can find gorgeous oak, cherry, walnut, white wood, lacquer, leather, musical, ballerina, lock and key jewelry boxes, all at well below retail prices.
formatting link
provides high quality craftsmanship and superior customer service. There is a special unbeatable deal offered every month on the website. Please come visit us. You'll be glad you did.

------------------------------------------------------------­---------

------------------------------------------------------------­---------Anna Samantha

formatting link
Because Your Jewelry Deserves It!!!!

---------------------------------------------------------------------

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Reply to
Leon

Craft fair in the fall, my church ran a little coffee booth. We've a couple 'Dorkers in our congregation. Plus one of our choir members owns a tree mizer--seems his wife encouraged him to buy it after he retired.

Anywho . . .

Guy there at the "craft fair" was selling "hardwood jewelery boxes" . . . . "handcrafted"

  1. Minwax light-oak stain does not convert pine into "hardwood"

  1. Hardwood drawers are not made of spruce.

  2. Handsawing does not leave circular saw marks.

  1. A drawer lock router bit is not my definition of "hand work."

  2. Neither is a drawer pull shaper profile.

  1. Nor a 1/8" roundover.

They were "nice" but in my estimation worth about a quarter of the price, even taking into account the natural Craft Fair Yahoo Factor where you can resell 10c shaker pegs for a buck a piece.

Reply to
Charles Krug

"Craft Fair Yahoo Factor". Heh, I love that, and it really hits home. :-) I live in a small town near the Hill Country in Texas, and we have a monthly "market day", where you see some "interesting" things. About half of the stuff looks like someone cleaned out grandma's attic and put a pricetag on the stuff, assuming if it's old then it's an "antique". The prices are unbelievable (and don't get me started on what they want for old rusty handtools), but evidently the stuff sells. (I guess we could call that the "Craft Fair Yahoo Anteek Factor".)

Then there's the "handcrafted" stuff. A lot of it is pine that looks like it's been left sitting in a pile on the ground for a year or three, and then dragged around the farm behind a tractor. This is then called "barnwood", cut to roughly equal lengths, and nailed together in various shapes sometimes resembling squares or rectangles. It is automatically worth more than the finest Chippendale. (I guess we could call this the "Craft Fair Yahoo Distressed Factor".)

You also get the "nick-knacks" intended to decorate your home in the finest "country" style. (Of course any real "country" person would rather have their cows make a "deposit" on the living room floor than have this stuff in their homes.) These are the various little placards and such with "cute" sayings (e.g., "If You're Smokin', You Better Be On Fire") on them that have been scrollsawn from cheap hardwoods and painted in festive colors. The really fancy ones have dowel or two so that they can double as coat hanger. (I guess we could call this the "Craft Fair Yahoo Kuntry Kitchen Factor".)

I have yet to see anything nearly as "finely-crafted" as what you describe in your post. Although there was one guy who had some unique cutting boards. They were made from strips of oak, maple, purplehart, mahogany, etc. laminated together ... and cut into the shape of the state of Texas. (I guess we could call this the "Craft Fair Yahoo Texas Factor".)

Chuck Vance

Reply to
Conan the Librarian

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