We are the leading 22ct Gold Jewellers of traditional , ramesh jewellers, 22 carat jewellery, oriental , ethnic and contemporary designs in the UK . We remain a traditional family business blessed with the legacy and backed by the versatile asian jewellery, rado watches, experience from generations. We have been in the gold jewellery business as manufacturers , wholesalers and retailers for more than thirty years. Our first showroom , diamond jewellery, platinum jewellery, opened in 1969, is located in the heart of the gold jewellery market. We have since opened an additional larger luxurious showroom to accommodate a wedding rings, platinum diamond rings, wider variety of products and services. We are the first 22ct Gold jewellers to have been elected to Membership of the National Association of Goldsmiths. handmade jewellery, engagement rings, We provide the highest quality of 22ct gold jewellery with the most comprehensive customer and after-sales services. Our stock includes solid, diamond engagement rings, bridal jewellery, carved, chiseled ,enameled, embossed, studded, filigree, Kundan, Geru, precious and semi-precious stones Gold Jewellery to every taste and wedding jewellery, uk jewellers, budget. Our latest designs consists of Rhodium plated , white gold and many more. We also manufacture to customer's specifications to the highest discount jewellery, religious jewellery, standard. We also have a wide range of Diamond and Platinum jewellery available in the showroom . We can supply any design in diamond jewellery shop, london jewellers, and plantinum jewellery within one day of order. Enquiry from wholesalers and retailers welcome Jewellery, personal adornment worn since ancient times by people of all cultures, as ornaments, as badges of social or official rank, and as emblems of religious or other belief. In its widest sense the term jewellery encompasses objects made of many kinds of organic and inorganic materials such as hair, feathers, leather, scales, bones, shells, wood, ceramics, metals, and minerals. More narrowly, and as used here, the term refers to mounted precious or semi-precious stones and to objects made of valuable or attractive metals such as gold, silver, platinum, copper, and brass. Jewellery has been worn on the head as crowns, diadems, tiaras, aigrettes, hairpins, hat ornaments, earrings, nose rings, earplugs, and lip rings; on the neck as collars, necklaces, and pendants; on the breast as pectorals, brooches, clasps, and buttons; on the limbs as rings, bracelets, armlets, and anklets; and at the waist as belts and girdles, with pendants such as chatelaines, scent cases, and rosaries. Much present knowledge of jewellery is derived from the preservation of personal objects in tombs. Information about the jewellery of cultures in which objects of value were not buried with the dead comes from portraits in surviving painting and sculpture. See Diamond; Enamel; Gemstones. The ancient Egyptians were familiar with most of the processes of ornamenting metal that are still practised today. They produced skilfully chased, engraved, soldered, repouss, and inlaid jewellery. They commonly worked in gold and silver and inlaid these metals with semi-precious stones such as cornelian, jasper, amethyst, turquoise, and lapis lazuli and with enamel and glass. Their jewellery included diadems; wide bead necklaces or collars; square pectorals; hoop, hinged, or bead bracelets; and rings. Many Egyptians wore two bracelets on each arm, one on the wrist and one above the elbow. A particularly popular ornament was the signet ring. Motifs the scarab (beetle), lotus, falcon, serpent, and eye, for example were derived from religious symbols.