2.2 ct. Color Change Garnet Oval Cut
- SKU
- #14480
- Dimensiones (mm)
- 8.900 x 7.000 x 4.300mm
- Peso (cts)
- 2.220
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Clarity
- SI
- Tipo
- Faceted
- Shape
- Oval
- Colores
-
COLOR CHANGE GARNET
Origin: Madagascar
Color: Color-change
The color changing garnet is a rare and precious garnet from the Pyralspites series, which is a series made up of the Pyrope Garnet, the Almandine Garnet and the Spessartite Garnet. This color-changing Garnet hybrid is predominantly composed of Pyrope Garnet, Spessartite Garnet and impurities of chromium and / or vanadium.
Physical and optical properties of Garnet color change
Color-changing garnets are found in the form of small pebbles (alluviums), grainy aggregates and crystals. Under natural daylight conditions, its color can be blue-green, green, blue (rare), green-gray, brown, beige. It is a mineral species in which we very often find minerals in inclusions, such as Rutile and Apatite to name a few. Large gem-quality stones that appear clean to the naked eye are extremely rare. Color-changing garnet is a stone that is not subject to any treatment or improvement of any kind, which is a good point for buyers. In the color changing garnets of the Pyralspites series, the coloring is generally due to manganese (Mn2 +) in the case of orange-colored stones and to iron (Fe2 +) in the case of red to pink stones. The color change, meanwhile, occurs when the gem contains vanadium (V3 +) or chromium (Cr3 +).
Cause of color change
The Garnet color changer has the ability to change color depending on the type of light source. The intensity of the color change phenomenon can be truly spectacular, much more than the change that can be observed among the majority of Alexandrians. Most of the color-changing garnets therefore present, under normal conditions of daylight observation, as we indicated above, the following colors: blue-green, green, blue (rare), green-gray, brown , beige, bronze. And can become, when viewed in incandescent light: pink, pink-orange to red, yellow-greenish, red-pink, light red, purple red, blood red, bluish green, light purple. The majority of color-changing garnets come mainly from Tanzania, Kenya, Sri Lanka and Madagascar. The color-changing garnet, commercially called Grenat Malaya or Grenat Malaia, has only been discovered to date in Africa and Madagascar (Bekily).
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SHIPPING & RETURNS
$9.50 for registered post with insurance and signature at the delivery - Trackable (delivery 15-30 days average).
Refund Policy – all wins have a 7 day period for return if the buyer is not 100% satisfied with their purchase - Return Postage to be paid by the buyer.
We do not offer combining for No Reserve Auctions.
All payments are expected within 2 days after auction is closed.
- SKU
- #14480
- Dimensiones (mm)
- 8.900 x 7.000 x 4.300 mm
- Peso (cts)
- 2.220
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Clarity
- SI
- Tipo
- Faceted
- Shape
- Oval
- Colores
-
COLOR CHANGE GARNET
Origin: Madagascar
Color: Color-change
The color changing garnet is a rare and precious garnet from the Pyralspites series, which is a series made up of the Pyrope Garnet, the Almandine Garnet and the Spessartite Garnet. This color-changing Garnet hybrid is predominantly composed of Pyrope Garnet, Spessartite Garnet and impurities of chromium and / or vanadium.
Physical and optical properties of Garnet color change
Color-changing garnets are found in the form of small pebbles (alluviums), grainy aggregates and crystals. Under natural daylight conditions, its color can be blue-green, green, blue (rare), green-gray, brown, beige. It is a mineral species in which we very often find minerals in inclusions, such as Rutile and Apatite to name a few. Large gem-quality stones that appear clean to the naked eye are extremely rare. Color-changing garnet is a stone that is not subject to any treatment or improvement of any kind, which is a good point for buyers. In the color changing garnets of the Pyralspites series, the coloring is generally due to manganese (Mn2 +) in the case of orange-colored stones and to iron (Fe2 +) in the case of red to pink stones. The color change, meanwhile, occurs when the gem contains vanadium (V3 +) or chromium (Cr3 +).
Cause of color change
The Garnet color changer has the ability to change color depending on the type of light source. The intensity of the color change phenomenon can be truly spectacular, much more than the change that can be observed among the majority of Alexandrians. Most of the color-changing garnets therefore present, under normal conditions of daylight observation, as we indicated above, the following colors: blue-green, green, blue (rare), green-gray, brown , beige, bronze. And can become, when viewed in incandescent light: pink, pink-orange to red, yellow-greenish, red-pink, light red, purple red, blood red, bluish green, light purple. The majority of color-changing garnets come mainly from Tanzania, Kenya, Sri Lanka and Madagascar. The color-changing garnet, commercially called Grenat Malaya or Grenat Malaia, has only been discovered to date in Africa and Madagascar (Bekily).
———————————————————————————————————————————————————————
SHIPPING & RETURNS
$9.50 for registered post with insurance and signature at the delivery - Trackable (delivery 15-30 days average).
Refund Policy – all wins have a 7 day period for return if the buyer is not 100% satisfied with their purchase - Return Postage to be paid by the buyer.
We do not offer combining for No Reserve Auctions.
All payments are expected within 2 days after auction is closed.
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Positivo
good star
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Positivo
Very nice, thank you!
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Positivo
Nice tourmaline. Multiple layers of different colors,
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Positivo
Paid and shipped - no feedback left after 100 days