Old Nepal Red Coral &
Turquoise Pendant Necklace
…beautiful collection and display piece
Old Nepal Red Coral & Turquoise Pendant
Necklace, a beautiful collection and display piece… Please
see detail photos which form part of the description… BDR/DRESS
The measurements are
Size: Hangs Approximately
25 cm
Please email me with any
questions
NOTE
Many of the items for sale at Jim’s
International Bazaar were collected by Jim on his around the world adventures
as an author, photojournalist, and photographer. They include Turkish
rugs, copper and brass, and artifacts from China, New Guinea, Africa,
and South America. These things are from his privet collection, none
were bought for the purpose of reselling but rather to decorate his home.
Many new items will be listed as they are unpacked from storage along with
a wonderful collection of photographic prints including many wildlife photos
and prints of tigers photographed in China.
ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER
James Anderson
is an internationally renowned
photojournalist and adventurer, with two major photographic books (New Guinea
& Cannibal), plus covers and major spreads in a whole host of
internationally prestigious magazines from Life International to The Geographic
and Argosy.
He's been shipwrecked in the Pacific,
wrestled camels in Turkey, and scoured the New Guinea Highlands in search
of missing American heir and adventurer Michael Rockefeller. He has also
lived and worked in the jungles of New Guinea for over two years
while collecting material for his books and records.
A blue-water yachtsman, he sailed his own
60ft yacht, the "Moana Vahine", from Hong Kong to Southern Turkey,
down the South China Sea, across the Indian Ocean, and up the full length of
the Red Sea, via Singapore, Panang, Sri lanki, The Maldive Islands, and French
Djibouti. An avid diver and spear fisherman, he mounted a series of diving
expeditions in The Maldive Islands and The Red Sea.
In addition to several years in New
Guinea, he has organized and/or participated in photographic expeditions
in Kenya and Tanzania, in Brazil and Columbia,
in Turkey and some of the more remote islands of the south pacific.
"On board the forty-foot ketch, the "Marquesa", we were the
first yacht to visit the remote island of Ua Pou, in the
Marquesas in almost two years.