Huldak
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2013
- Messages
- 218
Huldak|1427923281|3855555 said:I previously posted about finding a Montana Sapphire; along the way I decided to include rubies. A trusted vendor has found me the above. At $580 plus shipping, it appears to be the true red color I want and the perfect size for my existing setting, which is not easy to find.
I'd appreciate from the community any concerns or questions I should ask before purchasing, which I'm inclined to do if I go ruby (I'm waiting for the pics of the two Montana Sapphires they found for me). Any thoughts? TIA!
It's 4.8 mm, 2.8 mm deep, .53 cts
Origin is Mozambique.
Heated.
VS clarity.
TL|1427976783|3855724 said:Huldak|1427923281|3855555 said:I previously posted about finding a Montana Sapphire; along the way I decided to include rubies. A trusted vendor has found me the above. At $580 plus shipping, it appears to be the true red color I want and the perfect size for my existing setting, which is not easy to find.
I'd appreciate from the community any concerns or questions I should ask before purchasing, which I'm inclined to do if I go ruby (I'm waiting for the pics of the two Montana Sapphires they found for me). Any thoughts? TIA!
It's 4.8 mm, 2.8 mm deep, .53 cts
Origin is Mozambique.
Heated.
VS clarity.
For $500, you're not going to get a very high quality ruby. Unfortunately, with rubies, you have to spend a lot of money to get something with very good color, or you have to buy something so highly treated, that it's good color, with the caveat you know it's all from the treatments.
I personally don't think rubies are a good buy, and it's a rather dark unsaturated stone. I would spend my $500 on something that would be a better value. You can get decent sapphires for $500, but not a decent ruby I'm afraid. Others may disagree, but that's my opinion, and I'm sticking with it. Ruby is the one gemstone I don't own because of all the treatments, and I don't like 99% of what is out there because I don't have the money to afford the color I like. Sorry to be such a party pooper.
Huldak|1427978498|3855737 said:TL|1427976783|3855724 said:Huldak|1427923281|3855555 said:I previously posted about finding a Montana Sapphire; along the way I decided to include rubies. A trusted vendor has found me the above. At $580 plus shipping, it appears to be the true red color I want and the perfect size for my existing setting, which is not easy to find.
I'd appreciate from the community any concerns or questions I should ask before purchasing, which I'm inclined to do if I go ruby (I'm waiting for the pics of the two Montana Sapphires they found for me). Any thoughts? TIA!
It's 4.8 mm, 2.8 mm deep, .53 cts
Origin is Mozambique.
Heated.
VS clarity.
For $500, you're not going to get a very high quality ruby. Unfortunately, with rubies, you have to spend a lot of money to get something with very good color, or you have to buy something so highly treated, that it's good color, with the caveat you know it's all from the treatments.
I personally don't think rubies are a good buy, and it's a rather dark unsaturated stone. I would spend my $500 on something that would be a better value. You can get decent sapphires for $500, but not a decent ruby I'm afraid. Others may disagree, but that's my opinion, and I'm sticking with it. Ruby is the one gemstone I don't own because of all the treatments, and I don't like 99% of what is out there because I don't have the money to afford the color I like. Sorry to be such a party pooper.
Not at all, I appreciate your input TL. Since first looking around this forum a week or so ago I've been enthralled by how much there is to learn about colored stones, and I'm afraid even with all the reading I've done most times I'm still just at a loss. So, dark and unsaturated -- good to know. If I do decide to buy, I want to know what I'm getting.
Chrono|1427978033|3855733 said:It looks like a reasonably priced ruby. Is it great? No, because the colour is dark and the saturation isn't high. That said, $500 will not net you a great looking ruby, which is why I think it's a good stone for the price. This is not a stone I would bezel or set in an enclosed type of setting.
Chrono|1427991285|3855828 said:Colour is broken down into 3 main categories:
Hue which is the purity of colour be it pure red, orangish red, purplish red, etc.
Tone which is how light or dark it is. Too light and red will become pink. Too dark and the stone will approach looking blackish.
Saturation which is how much the colour pops. The less saturated, the browner or grayer the stone looks. The more saturated, the more neon it looks.
https://www.palagems.com/quality_4cs.htm
austinj|1428004093|3855956 said:Awesome thanks for being so helpful with the saturation question! It makes much more sense now. I think someone already said this but have you considered red spinel? It is still very expensive for top color stuff but I think still half the price of a top color Ruby right now.
+1Chrono|1427978033|3855733 said:It looks like a reasonably priced ruby. Is it great? No, because the colour is dark and the saturation isn't high. That said, $500 will not net you a great looking ruby, which is why I think it's a good stone for the price. This is not a stone I would bezel or set in an enclosed type of setting.
Niel|1427985667|3855780 said:Contact brad at the gem trader. Ask him if he has any red spinel. Last I spoke with him recently and he had a 5.9x4 spinel for under 600
TL|1427998759|3855920 said:You should also read this thread too. It's really important to be educated about sapphires and rubies.
[URL='https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/new-to-coloured-gemstone-buying-read-this-first.174284/']https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/new-to-coloured-gemstone-buying-read-this-first.174284/[/URL]
Huldak|1428007374|3855994 said:TL|1427998759|3855920 said:You should also read this thread too. It's really important to be educated about sapphires and rubies.
[URL='https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/new-to-coloured-gemstone-buying-read-this-first.174284/']https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/new-to-coloured-gemstone-buying-read-this-first.174284/[/URL]
I am looking at this again ... easier to understand now. To anyone who cares to answer, the green stone I posted above, are those dark spots extinction?
Here is a example of small stones with great color pic of mine, my red spinel and yellow diamond are 5mm or under and they pop really nicelyChrono|1427985285|3855774 said:A coloured stone with excellent colour will catch the eye, even if it is small. I know there are many PSers with small stones with high saturation that just pop, and hope that they will share pictures of their rings.
TL|1428027465|3856179 said:The extinction you see in the green stone above could be from the camera shadow. While many gems have some extinction due to facet shadows, it's not an issue unless the stone has so much extinction, it looks almost black. Some elongated shaped stones, such as ovals, tend to also show some extinction on one half. People here coined the term, "half and half extinction" to describe that. Some gems also go more extinct in some lighting. For example, I had a tourmaline once that looked almost black in sunlight, but had more sparkle in artificial light. I ended up returning it to the lapidary.
Here's a ruby with large dark areas of extinction, and I would not want such a stone.