----------------
On 7/7/2004 3:03:15 PM yenbai wrote:
Hello All,
I am from YenBai Mine, YenBai, Vietnam.
Have you ever heard of existance of any Red Beryl specimen mined from Burma? Thanks----------------
----------------
On 7/8/2004 10:27:59 AM yenbai wrote:
As a matter of fact we digged up some rough specimen and the tests conclude to be beryl, purple red color.
----------------
then why post a message asking if anyone had heard of it?
----------------
On 7/8/2004 1:04:35 PM yenbai wrote:
Hi Mogok, I am from North Vietnam not Burma. We digged up a rough 6 months ago and suceeded to have a faceted stone of 1,10 carats and sold. I have a bigger stone presently. What I am looking is to see if Burma has something similar because Burma and Vietnam are of the same geographical region millions years ago. Usually We dig up only ruby, star-ruby, spinel and sometimes sapphires. Beryl find is very very rare even for me.
Thanks
----------------
----------------
On 9/3/2004 12:28:30 PM spinel wrote:
Hi Scott, do you have a photo of the orangy red spinel you are looking for? spinel.
----------------
----------------
On 9/4/2004 3:14:20 PM elmo wrote:
As I said, these definitely aren't what I'd call orangy red, else I'd be keeping them. Raspberry is a great descriptor for these...I'm not a color expert but to my eye the key color leans more towards the purple side of red (or maybe an orangy-purplish-pink?
) whereas I thought the very top/most expensive stones are straight red, then next a slightly orangy red. These are distinctly pinkish and medium tone, but they dark out some in direct or incandescent lighting.![]()
Here are two fairly representative shots, at least here on my laptop screen. I've included some late summer tomatoes in the photo as a color reference.----------------![]()