raddygast
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2004
- Messages
- 179
Apologies for this post; it may be both too technical to be interesting to most people, and too vague to be comprehensible to the technical people.
But I really need some help because I have to contact my jewellery designer ASAP if I want to switch from a semi-bezel to a full-bezel.
Ok, I am now beginning to seriously wonder what the best setting would be for my red spinel.
(pictures here)
Here is the situation. It is very well cut, in a modified emerald step cut. Well proportioned as well. 7.61 x 6.21 x 4.79mm. Very good brilliance for this cut: 65% brilliance, 35% extinction, 0% windowing.
Here''s the problem. I have been observing it in different lights for a week now. Most of my observing is done by tilting the stone to the optimum angle for color flashes and light return. All of my pictures were also taken with this method. But I have noticed (especially when there is a lot of ambient daylight inside my apartment) that sometimes/often the color of the stone appears to bleed at many viewing angles.
At first I couldn''t tell if it was officially windowing, since I don''t fully understand the term yet. I know that a window is due to poor cutting (and low R.I. makes this worse), and is where you can see through a gem to the other side. In a sense this means that the light from near your eyes goes all the way through and doesn''t reflect back (so in theory it should be extinct). But on the other hand, light from the other side comes right back through the window to your eyes (so it should be half as saturated, roughly, as the "good" light which comes through the table, bounces off facets, and returns to your eye).
Now I don''t understand it fully because I don''t grasp how one can read, for example, text printed on a page, through a window. If the light bleeds through the gem, hits the text, and reflects (from the paper) back through the gem, should it not in that case appear fairly saturated since it travelled twice through the depth of the gem? Perhaps the saturation is the result of constant bouncing back and forth at precise angles before it comes back to the eye.
Anyway, to get back to the point. My stone is officially not "windowed" (0% windowing according to Richard). However, I am sure this is a measurement taken at the optimal angle perpendicular to the table. As Michael_E was describing, when you tilt the stone even a moderate amount, the window is instantly visible. It is largest through the large chunky sides of the stone (the big triangular looking sections along the length dimension). There is a miniature version of this along the "width" side too, but the length side is more severe. To me this seems like either light leakage or the reverse -- light entry from the sides of the stone, not the crown facets, that ends up coming to my eye. It is very unsaturated pink, which is what I would expect viewing light for example through the pavilion facets (as expected).
Now, in this state the gem appears quite dead -- not brilliant, and of a very dull, transparent lifeless color. But I have noticed that in this situation, which usually arises depending on how much diffuse light there is and where the light is coming from, if I cup my hands around the side of the stone (which is in a little plastic case and held with the table perpendicular to the ground, i.e. not tilted) then the stone suddenly appears quite beautiful again and the "dead facets" shine to life. Almost like the gem is generating its own light.
I think what is happening is that I minimize light entering through the side windows, so that the only light I see is the ambient light that has properly entered through the table and crown facets, and then reflected properly back to my eye. If I leave my eyes and the stone in the same position, and remove my hands, suddenly the stone goes "dead" again.
So my question is -- I am considering setting the stone in nice semi-bezel, where the bezel would cover most of the north and south ends of the stone, and just a tiny bit of the length dimension. Since the length "windows" are much larger than the width ones, maybe this is a bad idea? Maybe the bezels should cover the length dimension and leave the width one open?
And maybe, just maybe, it''s a dumb idea to have a semi-bezel at all, and the full bezel is the only way to go? Is there any way to know? Does my description make any sense to anyone? I hope I can get some advice on this. I initially wanted a semi-bezel to show off more of the stone, and its beautifully cut parameters and dimensions. Now I am worried that maybe the stone will look lifeless the more it is exposed on its sides, and the best setting would be a nice full bezel (thin, and only slightly reaching above the girdle, so that part of the crown facets and the table would be elevated above the bezel walls'' level).
Any help?
Ok, I am now beginning to seriously wonder what the best setting would be for my red spinel.
(pictures here)
Here is the situation. It is very well cut, in a modified emerald step cut. Well proportioned as well. 7.61 x 6.21 x 4.79mm. Very good brilliance for this cut: 65% brilliance, 35% extinction, 0% windowing.
Here''s the problem. I have been observing it in different lights for a week now. Most of my observing is done by tilting the stone to the optimum angle for color flashes and light return. All of my pictures were also taken with this method. But I have noticed (especially when there is a lot of ambient daylight inside my apartment) that sometimes/often the color of the stone appears to bleed at many viewing angles.
At first I couldn''t tell if it was officially windowing, since I don''t fully understand the term yet. I know that a window is due to poor cutting (and low R.I. makes this worse), and is where you can see through a gem to the other side. In a sense this means that the light from near your eyes goes all the way through and doesn''t reflect back (so in theory it should be extinct). But on the other hand, light from the other side comes right back through the window to your eyes (so it should be half as saturated, roughly, as the "good" light which comes through the table, bounces off facets, and returns to your eye).
Now I don''t understand it fully because I don''t grasp how one can read, for example, text printed on a page, through a window. If the light bleeds through the gem, hits the text, and reflects (from the paper) back through the gem, should it not in that case appear fairly saturated since it travelled twice through the depth of the gem? Perhaps the saturation is the result of constant bouncing back and forth at precise angles before it comes back to the eye.
Anyway, to get back to the point. My stone is officially not "windowed" (0% windowing according to Richard). However, I am sure this is a measurement taken at the optimal angle perpendicular to the table. As Michael_E was describing, when you tilt the stone even a moderate amount, the window is instantly visible. It is largest through the large chunky sides of the stone (the big triangular looking sections along the length dimension). There is a miniature version of this along the "width" side too, but the length side is more severe. To me this seems like either light leakage or the reverse -- light entry from the sides of the stone, not the crown facets, that ends up coming to my eye. It is very unsaturated pink, which is what I would expect viewing light for example through the pavilion facets (as expected).
Now, in this state the gem appears quite dead -- not brilliant, and of a very dull, transparent lifeless color. But I have noticed that in this situation, which usually arises depending on how much diffuse light there is and where the light is coming from, if I cup my hands around the side of the stone (which is in a little plastic case and held with the table perpendicular to the ground, i.e. not tilted) then the stone suddenly appears quite beautiful again and the "dead facets" shine to life. Almost like the gem is generating its own light.
I think what is happening is that I minimize light entering through the side windows, so that the only light I see is the ambient light that has properly entered through the table and crown facets, and then reflected properly back to my eye. If I leave my eyes and the stone in the same position, and remove my hands, suddenly the stone goes "dead" again.
So my question is -- I am considering setting the stone in nice semi-bezel, where the bezel would cover most of the north and south ends of the stone, and just a tiny bit of the length dimension. Since the length "windows" are much larger than the width ones, maybe this is a bad idea? Maybe the bezels should cover the length dimension and leave the width one open?
And maybe, just maybe, it''s a dumb idea to have a semi-bezel at all, and the full bezel is the only way to go? Is there any way to know? Does my description make any sense to anyone? I hope I can get some advice on this. I initially wanted a semi-bezel to show off more of the stone, and its beautifully cut parameters and dimensions. Now I am worried that maybe the stone will look lifeless the more it is exposed on its sides, and the best setting would be a nice full bezel (thin, and only slightly reaching above the girdle, so that part of the crown facets and the table would be elevated above the bezel walls'' level).
Any help?