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- Sep 20, 2008
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Beware of a newer treatment on sapphires, oiling.
"Oiling - An increasing number of sapphires treated with oil are appearing in the marketplace. Oiling the stone is a way to fill surface fractures. This treatment enables gem dealers to sell a larger stone (at a higher price) because fractures that might otherwise have to be cut away are filled with oil. Oil fillers are not stable and will evaporate over time, leaving a less attractive stone with readily apparent fractures."
"Ask whether the stone has been oiled. This treatment is coming into use and is often not disclosed by the gem supplier. Unless the jewelry retailer is a trained gemologist who has inspected the stone in a gem lab, he may not be aware that it has been oil treated."
Source:
http://jcrs.com/JCRS_for_consumers/jewelry_information/colored_gems/sapphire.htm""""
I know a vendor that had an oiled sapphire and when he submreged it in alchohol to remove the oil, all the inclusions showed up.
So, for sapphires, besides synthetics to worry about, we have the following treatments that I know of.
Regular heat
diffusion
irradiation
coating
fracture filling (now with oil, and maybe perhaps resin or wax, but not sure about the latter).
As always, buyer beware, and get that AGL report. The vendor above bought the sapphire from his supplier with a GRS report that indicated no treatment. He then sent it to AGL that deemed it oiled, so vendors are getting lab reports first, and then oiling the material, and sending them to customers as untreated. As always, the sapphire market is one of the scariest, especially with everyone wanting one for an e-ring these days. Evidently heat is not necessary for oiling either, or it is low heat that cannot be detected.
"Oiling - An increasing number of sapphires treated with oil are appearing in the marketplace. Oiling the stone is a way to fill surface fractures. This treatment enables gem dealers to sell a larger stone (at a higher price) because fractures that might otherwise have to be cut away are filled with oil. Oil fillers are not stable and will evaporate over time, leaving a less attractive stone with readily apparent fractures."
"Ask whether the stone has been oiled. This treatment is coming into use and is often not disclosed by the gem supplier. Unless the jewelry retailer is a trained gemologist who has inspected the stone in a gem lab, he may not be aware that it has been oil treated."
Source:
http://jcrs.com/JCRS_for_consumers/jewelry_information/colored_gems/sapphire.htm""""
I know a vendor that had an oiled sapphire and when he submreged it in alchohol to remove the oil, all the inclusions showed up.
So, for sapphires, besides synthetics to worry about, we have the following treatments that I know of.
Regular heat
diffusion
irradiation
coating
fracture filling (now with oil, and maybe perhaps resin or wax, but not sure about the latter).
As always, buyer beware, and get that AGL report. The vendor above bought the sapphire from his supplier with a GRS report that indicated no treatment. He then sent it to AGL that deemed it oiled, so vendors are getting lab reports first, and then oiling the material, and sending them to customers as untreated. As always, the sapphire market is one of the scariest, especially with everyone wanting one for an e-ring these days. Evidently heat is not necessary for oiling either, or it is low heat that cannot be detected.