- Joined
- Dec 14, 2017
- Messages
- 579


You’re the second person to say that. I think you may be right. When I find out for sure I’ll let you know. Thanks!!Could be a tsavorite garnet....
Whatever it is, it’s very pretty!!!
I have a feeling you know what you’re talking about!! LOL!!Tsavorite.![]()
I vote tsav, but could also be a chrome tourmaline...?
There is no way a pawn shop will sell something and not know what it is, can you imagine the possible loss of profit or huge rip off? Like paying for an emerald and getting dyed quartz, glass or a synthetic stone or viceversa. The colour is emerald like I think but if the ring is 200$ (for example) there's basically no way it's an emerald
Sometimes you do get lucky. I buy mineral specimens and crystals and I've picked up wrongly-identified things cheap, e.g. rubies sold as spinels, a 56 gram 'zircon' that was a pink spinel, a big cabinet-size specimen of 'peridot' that was actually demantoid garnet, and an 'epidote' that turned out to be a beautiful old-time specimen of alexandrite! These were all from mineral dealers as well.
Fingers crossed that ring is indeed a tsavorite.
Sometimes you do get lucky. I buy mineral specimens and crystals and I've picked up wrongly-identified things cheap, e.g. rubies sold as spinels, a 56 gram 'zircon' that was a pink spinel, a big cabinet-size specimen of 'peridot' that was actually demantoid garnet, and an 'epidote' that turned out to be a beautiful old-time specimen of alexandrite! These were all from mineral dealers as well.
Fingers crossed that ring is indeed a tsavorite.
Thanks very much Loretta. Wow, what a find! It would be great to get all those rubies tested. If one of them's an unheated Myanmar stone, then there's a good chance there will be others.
There was also an amazing story on here of a blue stone left by a relative that was thought to be fake or costume jewellery. Nope, it turned out it was a fabulous and extremely rare Kashmir sapphire that was worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, maybe more. It may have even been the same poster (Bron357). Not sure.
Did you find out what this stone was LorettaB?
Did you find out what this stone was LorettaB?
The stone is with my jeweler over in Louisiana. He swears it's an emerald and will do further testing and check all the the stones. He's been a jeweler for well over 30 years so I am pretty sure he knows what he's talking about. When I told him what I paid for it he said, "D**n good deal!!!"
Just make sure it’s not a doublet, which could have the same refractive index as emerald. I’ve seen jewelers duped, even ones that have been in the business for decades.
The best person to take it to would be a proper gemologist.