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A beautiful necklace and pendant being worn with an ugly crab claw clasp about an inch from the pendant. A beautiful necklace and pendant worn with a pendant positioner keeping the clasp out of sight.
Now you see the clasp. Now you don't -- ever.
Bet you didn't see the Curlique™ pendant positioner!

From the Sumerian civilization of four thousand years ago, through the Egyptian Pharaohs, the Greeks, and on to the European Middle Ages and Renaissance, then right up through modern times, the problem has persisted. The problem is that the clasp on an elegant necklace creeps around from the back of the neck of the wearer to where it is visible in front and detracts from the beauty of an exquisite pendant--and the wearer.

There have been some partial, but not completely satisfactory, solutions. Even the Egyptians sometimes attached the necklace directly to the sides of the pendant. But that is an expensive solution requiring a necklace for every pendant.

Other solutions to the problem have been created--and some even patented over the years--but none has become generally available to the public. Most such solutions require significant changes to either the manufacture of fine jewelry necklaces or pendants, or both, and can provide no benefit to the owners of the millions of necklaces and pendants already in use.

The patent pending Curlique™ (pronounced "curlicue") pendant positioner now solves the problem and will work for pendants and necklaces you own today as well as ones you purchase in the future. The solution is a delicate and resilient .006 inch diameter spring wire specially shaped and plated to hold your pendant in place on a necklace while remaining virtually invisible.

Scanned Prototype at about 10X
FRONT VIEWBACK VIEW
Front view of a necklace, pendant, and pendant positiioner at 10 times real size. Back view of a necklace, pendant, and pendant positiioner at 10 times real size.
Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.Approximately normal sixe iimage of necklace, pendant, and pendant positioner.
Which of the above actual size images has a pendant positioner holding the pendant in place?

Okay, you can't see it but you probably figured out pretty quick that they all do!

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