Autumn in New England
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2012
- Messages
- 6,105
Fun!
Yes!
Question for you, Autumn, and it might help you too, OP.
Through the process of the 4 stones - how much was it you learning what color of pad you ultimately wanted to have after (I assume) thinking you had it figured out by pictures online?- and did your wants evolve?
And how different was the color you saw throughout your different environmental lightings compared to the vendors photos on those stones?
not a ding on the vendors at all - but I’m really convinced this color range is the most difficult to photo compared to what you see with eye. Without post photo processing. And taking 50 for one that looks representative and the time involved in that. Also not to go on a speal if a vendor is using a camera or phone.
Brown where it’s not there.
Purple where it’s not there
Negating orange /amping pink.
failing in love with a photo posted online and trying to replicate that to your own IRL experience - can be a sad thing or happy thing.
I can’t offer much to you as I settled for a super shifty peach sapphire in my own Pad journey. Just that my opinion is cost of shipping (or travelling to see) multiple stones back and forth is an investment or a tuition - not a wasted loss. Because minute change is a world of change in Pad color. Maybe you’ll find you will prefer less clear crystal as a compromise to compensate for less saturation of color? Or something like that, as an example.
Best wishes on your journey OP!
I’ll enjoy following along.
This is such a mindful post! I totally agree. To answer your question... it was a combination of factors. The first stone really just came down to eventually wanting something larger (it was 1.48ct). I sold it. The second stone was just over 2ct. It ended up being more pink in daylight than I wanted. "What a pretty stone... is it pink sapphire?" Done. So that was part "me realizing I like them more orangey" and part "the vendor photos did not fully illustrate the shift." The third stone came from the NSC uncertified. It was mined in Umba Valley (the others had been Sri Lankan). This one was just under 3ct, more orangey, and more saturated. I think the NSC's photos and videos were pretty accurate. But once received, it had that somewhat coppery appearance in daylight that I mentioned previously. Combined with the deeper tone and more intense saturation, AGL qualified that as reading brown, and precluded it from the pad designation. GIA later certified it as a pad. By that time, I was well beyond the return period. I sold it and decided my next pad would be my final one. I put aside a healthy budget for it and that was that. Definitely a learning experience!