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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
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    40

    Default Star Sapphires and Ruby

    The sun was out and I was sorting my stones so thought I would take advantage of the situation.

    The yellow and pink stones are Star Sapphire cabs, and the red one is a Ruby. I wish I'd bought more of these when I had the opportunity as I really like the stars. I've got a soft spot for stones with surprises – especially colour-change stones. I used to have quite a few, but sold them earlier this year.

    Click image for larger version. 

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    Steve

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Central London
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    8,845

    Default

    Made up into jewellery they can be quite disappointing though. They are often opaque and boring until the light happens to hit them at the right angle.

    Men are said to be bad at multitasking, so if your dinner date is trying to have a meaningful conversation, and you are watching out for the stars to flash, youre not listening are you?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
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    Default

    Haha! You lost me at multitasking...

  4. #4
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    Aug 2009
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    Staffordshire
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    Default

    So would you be able to give more info about those steve? size/cost, are they for sale on your blog??

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
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    dear old Blighty - (in deepest Wiltshire)
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    Default

    oh, I love the star sapphires and that ruby is rather delicious too.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
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    Default

    Thanks Jill and Wallace! They are lovely. Both the Sapphires are translucent stones, but the Ruby is opaque, so the Sapphires win for me.

    Jill, these are on my website/bog whatsit. On there I'm selling them at £250 for the pink Sapphire, £300 for the yellow Sapphire and £350 for the Ruby. I got my prices from gemval.com. I bought all these 16 years ago from a fellow collector, but you can imagine I didn't pay that much for them!

    Actually, while we're on the subject, how on earth do you as jewellers value such things? Collectors have a very set formula but I'm not sure if jewellers have the same process? A collector looking at these three stones would immediate pick out the pink Sapphire as the most valuable – it's not only a pink Sapphire, which is quite rare, but it's from Ceylon. But according the gemval, which doesn't take into account origin, the Ruby is most expensive purely on carat weight and type. As I used gemval to value the stones I put on my website I may have made some errors.

    On to the stones though.
    The yellow Sapphire is from Thailand. It's 7.77cts, eye clean (VVS) and measures 11.5 x 8.7 x 6.7mm.
    The pink Sapphire is from Ceylon. It's 3.1cts, eye clean also and is 9 x 6 x 4.5mm.
    The Ruby is Kenyan and is 6.82cts and opaque. It's got some nice striations and banding inside it which makes it very pearly. It's 12 x 8.1 x 6.1mm

    If you've got something nice in mind to make from any of these I'm open to any offers. Although I'm selling a few stones, I'm not really doing it to make money – although that would be very nice!

    Steve

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