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GSK ALEKSANDRYT 1.70 mm VS Stock #2 YAX602aa

01-08-2012, 11:17
Aukcja w czasie sprawdzania była zakończona.
Cena kup teraz: 57 zł     
Użytkownik GEMSTONES-ZBM
numer aukcji: 2409128689
Miejscowość MONTREAL, Kanada
Wyświetleń: 30   
Koniec: 09-07-2012 13:52:12
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Witam Państwa

WSZELKIE SZCZEGÓŁOWE INFORMACJE DOTYCZĄCE CEN, ZAMÓWIEŃ, KOSZTÓW PRZESYŁEK, UBEZPIECZEŃ, ORAZ RABATÓW ZNAJDZIESZ KLIKAJĄC NA PONIŻSZY LINK:


Strony informacyjne - CENY, KOSZTY PRZESYŁKI, UBEZPIECZENIA, RABATY

CERTYFIKATY - WAŻNE!!! PRZECZYTAJ - NIE DAJ SIĘ NABRAĆ!!!


Na tej aukcjj prezentuje ciqkawy, naturalny ALEKSANDRYT z Indii.


Gemmologiczny opis prezentowanego kamienia



Rodzaj kamienia- Aleksandryt

Kształt- Okrągły

Wymiary- 1.70 na 1.70 mm

Waga- ~ 0.03 karata

Kolor- vstbG 5/4 (Średnio nasycony, ton sredni, bardzo mocno niebieskawozielony)

vstbG 5/3 (Lekko nasycony, ton sredni, bardzo mocno niebieskawozielony)

r/P 5/2 (Bardzo lekko nasycony, ton sredni, czerwonawopurpurowy)

P 4/3 (Lekko nasycony, ton srednio swiatle, purpurowy)

Kraj pochodzenia- India

Stopień czystości- VS (Male inkluzje niewidoczne dla oka)

Szlif- Bardzo dobry

Blask- Bardzo dobry

Przetwarzanie- Nie
Ogólna ocena- Bardzo dobra


Alexandrite was discovered in 1830 in the Ural mountains of Russia. Alexandrite is also found in Sri Lanka, Brazil, India, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and most recently in Madagascar. The alexandrite variety of chrysoberyl is one of the rarest and most sought after of all gems.

KNOWN FACTS:

Color Key Color changing from green to red.
Refractive index 1.741 - 1.760
Chemical Composition BeAl2O4
Hardness 8.50
Ddensity 3.73
Crystal Group Orthorhombic
Ocurrence Tanzania, India, Russia, Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Zambia.
Sign of the Zodiac Gemini
Month of the year June
Planet Mercury


Alexandrite is the name given to chrysoberyl which changes color due to the light source under which the stone is being observed. The two colors are usually blue-green in daylight and purplish-red under incandescent light. Stones with a weak change or better are identified as alexandrite while stones with a faint change are considered to be chrysoberyl.

What to look for in alexandrite?

First and foremost, we need to look at the quality and strength of the color change. A strong change where the colors are bright and attractive under any kind of light is most desirable. Many stones are either a beautiful green in daylight or a nice pinkish red under incandescent light but they are less often attractive under both light conditions. However, since alexandrite is so rare, even stones with a weaker or a less attractive change are still valuable. We grade color changes as faint, weak, moderate, or strong.

Clarity, cut, and size are the next most important considerations after color. Large stones are always rare and as a result more valuable. Cutting and proportions are important but a careful balance between weight retention, shape, color change and, careful positioning of unremovable inclusions is required to produce the most valuable stone. A poorly cut 1ct.+ stone may be worth more than a perfectly cut .90ct. stone so cutting and preforming require careful attention in order to maximize yield and value.

Which alexandrites are best?

Although Russian alexandrites have the most historical value, fine stones are available from several other deposits. Brazil, India, and Tanzania produce the bulk of today’s production but alexandrites are also found in Sri Lanka and Madagascar. Top stones are extremely rare but all of these deposits occasionally produce exceptional stones. Brazilian stones typically show the best reds under incandescent light but Indian stones are well known for their superior bluish green daylight colors. Tanzania and Madagascar seem to produce the largest stones and some of the stones are exceptional. There is currently hardly any production of Russian stones.

What colors should we look for?

There is no fixed rule about this. Some dealers look at the red incandescent color and price the stones based on the intensity of the red. My own feeling is that both the daylight green and the incandescent colors should be nice and hightly saturated if possible. The srength of the color change change is the most important factor affecting the value of alexandrites. The GIA grades the following colors as top in daylight, G 5/2 (medium slightly grayish green) and vslbG 5/2 (medium slightly grayish very slightly bluish green). Under incandescent light, R 5/3 (medium very slightly brownish red) and slpR 5/3 (very slightly brownish slightly purplish red) are considered to be the best colors. Some stones may only look good in daylight or only under incandescent light and they should be less expensive. Finally, it is the buyer that will wear the stone so the colors he or she likes are the most important.

Is my alexandrite real?

Synthetic alexandrite like sapphire has been around for almost 100 years. Flux grown or lab created alexndrites have been produced for over 30 years. Synthetic alexandrites are common but can be easily identified by experienced gemologists. Curiously we seem to receive many inquiries about alexandrites purchased in Alexandria, Egypt where there is no known deposit but probably strong demand from the tourists looking for souvenirs. Almost all of these stones are synthetic. Gemologists study inclusions and gemological properties to identify synthetic stones.

What causes the color change?

Alexandrite is a trichroic gemstone which may absorb and reflect light differently in each of its three optical directions. However, it is not the trichroism that is responsible for the remarkable change. The color change phenomena is a result of the presence of chromium +3 ions and the way they are absorbed and reflected. In rubies the chromium absorption band is around 550 nanometers and in emeralds, the band is around 600nm. In alexandrite, where the band is at 580nm and right between ruby red and green emerald, the stone is balanced between them. When the light is balanced (daylight), the stone will be green but when the light source is reddish (incandescent), the stone appears red.

Alexandrite or Chrysoberyl, What's the difference?

In practice, chrysoberyl and alexandrite may be difficult to differentiate. Since stones with a weak change may be called alexandrite and stones with a faint change are called chrysoberyl, what is the difference? Where is the borderline?

Since the origin of the color change in alexandrite is due to the presence of chromium while the color of yellow or brown chrysoberyl is due to the presence of iron, a close examination of the spectroscopy will reveal the differences as both chromium and iron display characteristic spectrums. The yellow variety shows a broad band centered at about 4450 A in the blue violet while the alexandrite variety shows a chromium spectrum. The presence of chromium lines in the red orange area of the spectrum are diagnostic for alexandrite.

Fluorescence is another property to help us differentiate. Chrysoberyl owns its yellowish color to iron and usually shows no fluorescence. The red fluorescence of alexandrite can be observed using the “crossed filter” method and it has been inferred that in border line cases the presence of a red glow and a faint chromium spectrum absorption spectrum would prove the stone to be alexandrite and not chrysoberyl.

In the case of “borderline chrysoberyls”, (stones showing a visible but weak color change), it may be difficult to find any spectrum or fluorescence. Even the GIA reference guide says that alexandrite can show no fluorescence.

If a color change chrysoberyl shows a chromium spectrum and red fluorescence, it will be named variety “alexandrite”. For a “border line stone” showing a visible color change but an inconclusive spectrum and no fluorescence, the authority issuing the report will then use the master stone to make the decision. If this “border line stone” shows a weaker color change compared to the master stone it will be graded as a chrysoberyl and if it shows a stronger one, it will be graded as an alexandrite.

About our photographs.

Alexandrite is especially difficult to photograph. Not only does the color change as a result of illumination under different kinds of light sources but it also varies as a result of geographical location and time of day. Pictures can also differ because of technological obstacles like screen and graphic resolutions. We try to minimize the variations with good equipment and controlled lighting so that our images are as accurate as possible. The colors in our images are dependent on the lighting environment and we use cool daylight tubes (~6000K) for daylight shots and studio or photo flood lights (3300 – 3500K) as our incandescent light source. A typical alexandrite shot will maximize the observable color change by obstructing any unintentional ambient light so that the resulting image is a function of a singular unmixed light source. We work with imaging programs like Paint Shop and Adobe for sizing and positioning but we do not alter the colors unless it is too improve the accuracy of the color presentation.

Wszystkie nasze kamienie szlachetne są w 100% kamieniami naturalnymi.
Nie posiadamy, nie sprzedajemy i nie tworzymy kamieni syntetycznych.

Jeżeli jakikolwiek z kamieni był poddany jakimkolwiek sztucznym zabiegom, informacja na ten temat zawsze będzie podana w opisie gemmologicznym.
Jeżeli w opisie podajemy, że kamień nie został poddany jakimkolwiek czynnościom, to robimy to tylko i wyłącznie wtedy, kiedy jesteśmy tego w 100% pewni.

Każdy pojedynczy kamień został podwójnie przebadany przez naszych profesjonalnych gemmologów.

Paczkę wysyłam w ciągu 1-3 dni roboczych liczonych od chwili zaksięgowania wpłaty na koncie.
Dane do przelewu wysyłam mailem po aukcji.


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