gemstone

You are currently browsing articles tagged gemstone.

Vibrant and glowing like a hot ember, the ancients considered the ruby to be the most powerful and magnificent gem of all. Throughout much of recorded history rubies have been prized above all other gems. Like emeralds, quality rubies of rich colour, few inclusions, and good clarity are exceedingly rare. Size is a relative term in the world of gems. An average size for a ruby is actually smaller than the average size associated with most other gemstones. At auctions large rubies of uniform red colour have sold for more than flawless diamonds.

“A clear, transparent, and faultless ruby of a uniform red color is at the present time the most valuable precious stone known.” Max Bauer – 1894.

Timeless beauties
The name Ruby comes from the Latin “rubinus” meaning red. It was called ratnaraj (sanskrit) meaning “the king of gems” in ancient India. Ancient cultures in Eastern Asia described the ruby as “a drop of the heart’s blood of Mother Earth.”

Rubies have been used to represent the sun in may cultures, they were believed to bring prosperity and banish sadness. In prehistoric eastern cultures the ruby was worn to shield warriors from enemy strikes. The ancient Burmese were know to implant rubies under warriors skin to make them invulnerable, and bring them valor in battle. As a talisman across the ages it’s been worn to protect against danger, and ward off sickness and disease. The gems were occasionally ground up into a medicinal power and placed on the tongue. This was done to treat indigestion, stop bleeding, cure blood diseases and heart ailments.

Ancient Hindus divided rubies into classes: lower, middle and upper class. They were categorized by clarity and colour. The highest quality vibrant red stones being upper class, and the lighter pink stones being lower class. It was not permitted for the different classes of ruby to touch one another, be worn together, or stored together. There was a very similar classification system used in Mandarin China, where a persons rank was determined by the size and colour quality of their ruby, usually worn in a ring. It is said that the Chinese Emperor Kublai Khan offered a entire city in exchange for a large vibrant ruby.

The photos above feature fine ruby ‘silk’. Under a microscope these inclusions and bubbles can be seen. These ‘flaws’ give rubies their unique character.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A corundum of any other colour
Corundum is a mineral of aluminum oxide with traces of iron, titanium and chromium. Gems formed in this rock comes in a rainbow of colours including black and white (colourless). All colours of corundum except red are sapphires. For a corundum gemstone to officially be classified as a ruby it has to have a specific saturation of red (chromium). In the U.S. a ruby must be a deep pink otherwise it’s called a pink sapphire. A typical ruby is deep pink to violet red, but ‘pigeons blood’ red rubies are the most prized and sought after.

Spinel is another gemstones (not a corundum) that occurs in shades of red and pink. They can be found with deposits of ruby and often misidentified. A few famous historic rubies have turned out to be red spinels like the Black Prince’s Ruby from the Imperial State Crown (United Kingdom).

Ruby silk
Natural rubies have inclusions or impurities that are very important in categorizing the quality and determining whether the stone is natural, heat treated or synthetic. These “flaws” or rutile needles are referred to as silk since they look like tiny silk threads within the stone.

Most rubies are treated to enhance their colour and reduce the appearance of inclusions. The highest quality stones with the best colour are found in Burma, Thailand, and Sri Lanka.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

A mysterious stone Alexandrite is said to encourage joy and bring strength. With it’s colour changing ability this remarkable stone reminds us that sometimes life is not what it seems to be, it gives us hope and prompts us to find our purpose and universal origin.

​Emerald by day, ruby by nightAlexandrite:Day-to-Candlelight
Alexandrite is often referred to as showing “nature’s bag of tricks” because of it’s changeable nature. This colour change mineral is green under natural sunlight, but under candlelight or incandescent light the gem shows red or raspberry pink. This stone can also exhibit another phenomena, cat’s eye.

Alexandrite was discovered in a nearly exhausted emerald mine in the Russian Ural Mountains. The gem was originally mistaken as emerald by the miners who found it in 1830’s Russia. It is said that at the end of the day the miners took the brilliant green stones back to their camp, and in the warm glow of their fire the stones shone vibrant red. The next morning they were brilliant green again, after that they realized a new previously unknown gemstone had been discovered.

​A noble stone of rare birthAlexandrite Mineral Specs
The discovery of the stone coincided around Russian tsar Alexander II’s coming of age – it’s namesake. It became recognized as the official gemstone of tsarist Russia, the colours green and red were old Imperial Russia’s military colors.

Alexandrite was formed in a geological scenario that occurred rarely in Earth’s history. The two main chemical elements that aid in the formation of the this crystal (beryllium and chromium) don’t as a rule coexist together. Silica (the second most common element in Earth’s crust) is lacking in these contrasting rock types making this gemstone genuinely rare. Quality Alexandrite is scarce and they hold a higher value than quality diamonds. The best stones were found in Ural Mountains in Russia but the stores have been depleted. Other countries mine the gem but their colours are less brilliant. This stone is now rarely found over three carats. Stones of excellent clarity over one carat are exceptionally rare.

What about the 4 C’s?
A few gemstones have qualities that increase the value and demand of a stone outside the box of the 4 c’s. The four C’s are: carat, cut, color, and clarity. While the previous factors are important Alexandrite is highly graded for the strength of it’s colour change, and the colours that appear under different lighting situations. Like the Emerald it often finds itself beyond the grading parameters used to determine the value of gems like diamonds.

Incandescent Light

Alexandrite fancy cut gemstones under incandescent light.

Move over DeBeers
Tiffany’s popularized this rare gemstone. Their master gem buyer George Kunz apparently fell in love with Alexandrite and traveled Russia in search of it. It’s unknown how much he bought over the years, but Tiffany’s reserve of Alexandrite was large enough to corner the market for decades until the mineral was discovered in new locations worldwide.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

« Older entries