Mother’s spirit still shines
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She had seen the ring before -- on television and in promotional
catalogs -- but never on another person’s finger.
So when Corona del Mar resident Janet de Michaelis laid her eyes
on the 1.27-carat yellow diamond earlier this week, she couldn’t help
but smile.
As president of the Omega Society, a family-owned funeral-,
burial- and cremation-services company, de Michaelis is always
searching for new ways to help her clients memorialize their loved
ones.
This one, she said, is unlike all other mementos.
Mounted on the ring was a diamond made out of a mother’s cremated
remains.
“I can see myself as a diamond,” de Michaelis said. “What an
incredibly personal way of preserving the memory of a loved one.”
Laura Curtin thought so.
The Westminster resident is the first Orange County resident to
purchase the customized ring. De Michaelis helped coordinate the
transaction between Curtin and Chicago-based LifeGem Co., which makes
the product.
Curtin’s mother, Betty Hess Wright, died March 22. Curtin and her
mother worked together in a family income-tax and bookkeeping
business, and Curtin said the two were close.
They went shopping on the weekends and often browsed through
jewelry departments together.
“My mom had a lot of style,” Curtin said. “She said, ‘However you
want to remember me, that’s fine.’”
Curtin decided on the ring. She sent LifeGem a cup of her mother’s
ashes, and the company extracted carbon from the existing remains.
Curtain ordered a three-quarter-carat diamond, priced at about
$8,000, but LifeGem created a 1.27-carat diamond for her at the
lower-carat price.
Tuesday, Curtin picked up the ring from a store in Orange.
“When I actually saw the stone, it took my breath away,” Curtin
said. “It hit me that I’d be able to see my mom shine all the
time.... This is a much better memorial than to have a burial in a
cemetery.”
De Michaelis said LifeGem has delivered about 1,500 stones across
the country.
She said she first contacted the company about three years ago,
soon after they started making the product. She began telling her
clients about the option.
“When I tell people about it, I still get half the people looking
at me cross-eyed, and the other half saying, ‘That is the coolest
thing,’” de Michaelis said.
She said jewelers and customers are picking up on the idea of
personalizing jewelry. Another of de Michaelis’ customers has already
purchased a blue LifeGem diamond through the Omega Society.
De Michaelis said she is pleased with Curtin’s product and enjoyed
seeing her enjoy her mother’s company once again.
“Death isn’t a pleasant experience,” de Michaelis said. “This is
the first time something nice has come out of a death.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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