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CEYLON SAPPHIRE
Sapphire and Ruby comprise more than half of all Gemstones sold worldwide.
Sapphire's popularity is not based on color alone. Its hardness of
9 places it next to Diamond (10), making it an excellent choice for jewelry
worn daily. It is frequently featured in engagement rings.
Most people relate Sapphire to the color Blue. But this form of Corundum
is readily available in an array of other colors: Pink, Golden, Green,
peachy Orange, Purple and Colorless. Fancy colors in Sapphires are
described as being variations of the standard hues. Color change
Sapphires are those which have two colors which are distinct when the light
source is changed from fluorescent to incandescent. Generally, the
more clear and vivid the color, the more valuable the fancy sapphire.
If the color is in the pastel range, the clarity should be good: because
in lighter tones inclusions are more noticeable, the trade usually prefers
the gemstones to be cleaner with fewer visible inclusions. In a lighter
colored gemstone, the cut is also more important: it should reflect light
back evenly across the face of the stone, making it lively and brilliant.
With darker more intense colors, the cut isn't as critical because the
color creates its own impact.
Kashmir Sapphire - Ceylon Blue Sapphire Although everyone has heard of the fabled Burmese Kashmir Sapphire, few
have ever seen one. We constantly see appraisals that refer
to Kashmir Sapphire, but it's just about always refers to a top gem quality
Deep Royal Blue Ceylon Sapphire from Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon).
Once in a great while we are able to acquire a real one, but since the
mine has been depleted and these highly prized stones are old stones that
are simply brought back onto the market, they don't last long. Authentic
Kashmir Sapphires carry a particularly high cost per carat and are very
highly valued Collectors Gemstones.
Color Change Sapphire A color change Gemstone is one that changes from one color to another due to the light source. The color change comes about in a Gemstone due to the atomic structure of the stone. The ultraviolet rays in sunlight or fluorescent light excite the atoms in a color change Gem, but artificial (incandescent) light does not. Sapphire is one of the few Gemstones that can have a color change. The more dramatic the color change, the rarer and more expensive the stone. All of our Color Change Sapphires are are very highly valued Collectors Gemstones. Green Sapphire These Sapphires are generally a strong, bright green color, sometimes from green to bluish green or yellowish green pleochroism. They are not the same tone of Green as the Chrome Tourmaline, Tsavorite Garnet, or Emerald, but can at first glance look very similar. The mixed Oval and Cushion cut are the most common, but you can sometimes find square or rectangular step cuts. Green Sapphires are excellent choices for mounting in jewelry as well as in any Collection. Due to the rarity of Green Sapphire it is difficult to find stones of any size. Pink Sapphire Pink Sapphires are one of the HOTTEST of the fancy color Sapphires. The Hot Pinks have seen the largest increase in value over the past 5 years of any of the Sapphires. True Hot Pinks are very rare. Pink Sapphires are treasured Gemstones in any Collection. Price per carat reflects the size, evenness of the color, the clarity and the brightness of the stone. Padparadscha Sapphire Padparadscha is the Sinhalese word meaning "lotus blossom". Padparadscha
is Corundum in the pastel shades of delicate Orange-Yellow-Pink.
Padparadscha can run from a more predominant Pink with nice Yellow-Orange
mixed in, to the intense pastel tones of predominantly Hot Pink with Yellow-Orange mixed
in, this means the Pink would be the more predominant color in the
stone but the others are present and visible. At the other end of
the color spectrum Padparadscha can run from a more predominant pastel
Orange with nice Pink-Yellow mixed in, to the darker tones of Orange with
Pink-Yellow mixed in. One color can be more predominant than the others,
but never without the others. The AGTA Lab
recently took a variety of stones that dealers suggested met the criteria of
Padparadscha and scientifically defined the color range using an imaging
spectrophotometer. Unfortunately, the results of that attempt almost
entirely excluded the stones produced from Tanzania’s Umba Valley.
Most dealers and gemologists feel that the
Umba stones do not qualify because of their overly dark tones and strong brown
(’garnety’) component. The spectacular “aurora” red-orange stones from
Vietnam and Madagascar, even though there are no brown components in those
stones, are also excluded by the AGTA definition because of their oranges of
high saturation and/or dark tones, this is mainly because Sri Lanka has
traditionally never produced such colors. In other words, when it comes to
getting a gem report on Padparadscha, if it isn't from Sri Lanka and in a pastel
shade, it isn't Padparadscha. Most Padparadscha
tends to have slight inclusions, especially in the rich intense tones, so if you
see one that is a well cut and eye clean (or better) stone, with rich pastel
blended color having all three colors evenly balanced and saturated throughout
the stone, you are looking at one of the most expensive and sought after top quality
Padparadscha gems available from the mines in Sri Lanka (Ceylon). We
only carry the finest natural Ceylon Padparadscha Sapphire which carries a
premium price nearing and sometimes surpassing the price for fine Ceylon (kashmir
and royal) Blue Sapphire. Fine Padparadscha Sapphire is rarer than fine Ruby
with a great investment potential!
White Sapphire White or "Colorless" Sapphires have a great deal of brilliance, are attractive,
durable and well priced. Colorless Sapphires are not common. In fact they
are very difficult to obtain, so prices should continue to move upward
in the market. Some Colorless Sapphires have a very light tint of
Blue, Yellow, or Pink but are still considered colorless.
Yellow Sapphire Yellow Sapphires are intense, bright stones ranging from medium light Yellow to deep golden Yellow. These faceted Gems are exceptional in jewelry and have become quite popular as an alternative color for Blue.
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