Pearl Jewellery
Pearl jewellery offers a combination of organic warmth, tonal variety, and quiet luxury that no cut gemstone matches. This collection brings together pearl pieces set in yellow, white, and rose gold, suited to formal occasions and everyday wear in Ireland.
When choosing pearl jewellery, nacre depth matters more than headline size. Thicker nacre holds its glow far longer than a thin coating over a bead. Akoya pearls deliver a sharp, mirror-like lustre; freshwater pearls offer softer tones at more accessible price points; South Sea pearls sit at the premium end. If you are ever unsure about authenticity, the tooth test is reliable: genuine pearls feel slightly gritty, while glass or plastic imitations feel smooth. For rings and pendants worn regularly, a bezel or half-bezel setting protects the pearl's drill point from impact. Pearls benefit from occasional wear but should be kept away from perfume, hairspray, and chlorine.
A family-run business since 1997 with in-house workshops in Thurles and Dungarvan, Ciaran O'Flynn Jewellers is led by founder Ciaran O'Flynn, a qualified watchmaker and jeweller, and a proud member of the Association of Fine Jewellers. The in-house workshop handles resizing, repairs, and custom commissions directly, and a transparent gold trade-in service is available for anyone looking to part-exchange older pieces. Browse to find the piece that fits the occasion.
32 products
32 products
Pearl Jewellery FAQs
Pearls are among the oldest materials used in jewellery. Unlike cut gemstones, they are organic gems formed inside oysters and freshwater mussels and do not require cutting or polishing. When set into gold or strung on silk, pearls qualify as fine jewellery, and the gold mount is hallmarked at its fineness (9ct, 14ct, 18ct or 22ct) just as it would be on any other piece.
You can, but they need more care than harder gemstones. Pearls sit low on the Mohs hardness scale (around 2.5 to 4.5) and their nacre surface is sensitive to perfume, hairspray, chlorine, cosmetics, and prolonged moisture. Daily wear accelerates surface dulling and, for rings in particular, raises the risk of knocks. Rotating pearl pieces with other jewellery, and wiping them with a soft cloth after wear, will extend their life considerably.
Pearls have held their reputation for understated elegance for centuries, and contemporary design has widened the category rather than displaced it. Single-strand Akoya necklaces and stud earrings remain formal staples, while baroque shapes, keshi pearls, and asymmetric gold settings have brought pearl jewellery into modern editorial styling.
High-quality pearls sit firmly in the luxury category. South Sea and Tahitian pearls, with their size, rarity, and deep natural overtones, command the highest prices and are graded much like diamonds on lustre, surface quality, shape, and nacre thickness. Cultured freshwater pearls are more accessible, though even within freshwater the top grades with thick nacre and a round shape carry a genuine premium.