Gemstones Auctions

February 3, 2010

Purchase Tanzanite at Gemrock Auctions

Filed under: Tanzanite — Tags: , — admin @ 3:45 am

If you’re looking for quality gems at an inexpensive price, check out http://www.gemrockauctions.com/ on a regular basis.

Here is what is being offered in Tanzanite today.

GENERIC PHOTO CERTIFIED NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) 0.95 CTS SG103
Gem Traders
190.00 - yes - 13 hours 18 minutes
CERT NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) STONE 1.39 CTS SG 1933
Gem Traders
178.80 - yes - 13 hours 28 minutes
DANASGEMSTONES 18.00 - yes 5×3 1 day 9 hours
Certified Tanzanite Round,.32 Carat
DANASGEMSTONES
25.00 - yes - 1 day 10 hours
CERTIFED TANZANITE STONE 0.60 CTS [C35]
sedagems
79.99 - yes - 1 day 12 hours
CERT NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) STONE 1.66 CTS SG 1934
Gem Traders
208.05 - yes - 1 day 13 hours
PHOTO OF THE GEM IS IN THE PACKAGING CERTIFIED NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) 0.92 CTS SG104
Gem Traders
195.00 - yes - 3 days 10 hours

January 25, 2010

Video: Mining Tanzanite

Filed under: Tanzanite — Tags: , , , — admin @ 12:27 pm

Jewelry Television produces brief (very brief) documentaries on a variety of precious gems and jewelriy. Check out these two on tanzanite.

Mining Tanzanite

Caring for Tanzanite

January 18, 2010

More information on turquoise

Filed under: loose gemstones, turquoise — Tags: , , , — admin @ 1:20 pm

Turquoise is an opaque, bluish to greenish mineral. It is a hydrous phosphate of copper and aluminium. Turquoise is rare, and valuable in finer grades.

Turquoise has been valued as both a gem and ornamental stone for thousands of years. However, like most other opaque gems, turquoise has been devalued recently with the explosion of treatments, imitations, and synthetics onto the market. However, most people still value the real thing.

The name Turquoise was coined in the 16th century from the French language, either from the word for Turkish (Turquois) or dark-blue stone (pierre turquin). Turquoise is not found in Turkey, but was traded at Turkish bazaars to Venetian merchants who brought it to Europe.

Turquoise was among the very first gems to be mined by the ancients. Many historic sites have been depleted, but some are still worked — as small-scale, seasonal operations, owing to the limited scope and remoteness of the deposits. Most are worked by hand with little or no mechanization.

In the United States, turquoise is often recovered as a byproduct of large-scale copper mining operations.

Turquoise is found in Iran, Sinai Peninsula, and the southwest United States ( Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada.

January 11, 2010

The uniqueness of Tanzanite

Filed under: Tanzanite — Tags: , , — admin @ 6:38 am

Tanzanite is a gem noted for its trichroism (tri meaning three, obviously). Depending on the orientation of the crystals, a single stone can appear sapphire blue, violet, and burgundy, depending on how it is held up to the light. However, this blue color does not come naturally. In its rough state, tanzanite is usually a reddish brown color, .and must be heat treated to bring out the blueness.

Tanzanite — the blue/purple variety of the mineral zoisite — was discovered in 1967 in the Meralani Hills, near the city of Arusha, in northern Tanzania. Tanzania was mined successfully by entrepreneurs for some time, until the mines were nationalized by the Tanzanian government in 1972.

In June 2003, the Tanzanian government introduced legislation banning the export of unprocessed tanzanite to India (like many gemstones, most tanzanite is cut in the city of Jaipur). The ban was explained as an attempt to spur development of local processing facilities, thereby boosting the economy of the country.

Tanzania also produces tsavorite, diamond and ruby.

The story of Tanzania is an interesting one. The country came into existence in 1964, when the countries of Tanganyika and Zanzibar united. (Zanzibar is an island off the mainland coast).

December 18, 2009

Tanzanite gemstones at auction

Filed under: Tanzanite — Tags: , — admin @ 10:01 am

Take a look at the beatiful tanzanite available from Gemrock auctions today.

Picture Title Price (USD) Bids Dimensions Certified Gemstones Time Left
PHOTO OF THE GEM IS IN THE PACKAGING CERTIFIED NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) 0.92 CTS SG104
Gem Traders
195.00 - - yes 4 hours 1 minute
CERTIFED TANZANITE STONE 0.60 CTS [C35]
sedagems
79.99 - - yes 6 hours 1 minute
CERT NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) FACETED .77 CTS SG1932
Gem Traders
100.10 - - yes 2 days 6 hours
CERT NATURAL ZIOSITE (TANZANITE) STONE 1.66 CTS SG 1934
Gem Traders
208.05 - - yes 3 days 7 hours

December 12, 2009

Ametrine gemstones at auction right now

Filed under: Ametrine — Tags: , , — admin @ 9:53 am

Take a look at what’s available at Gemrockauctions.com in the Ametrine section.

CERT AMETRINE VVS QUALITY FACETED STONE 26.11 CTS SG 1872
Gem Traders
223.80 - - yes 2 days 4 hours
CERT AMETRINE VVS QUALITY FACETED STONE 33.83 CTS SG 1871
Gem Traders
285.00 - - yes 2 days 4 hours
CERTIFIED BOLIVIA NATURAL QUARTZ AMETRINE 21.38 CT EM 1878
Gem Traders
205.00 - - yes 2 days 6 hours
CERT AMETRINE VVS QUALITY FACETED STONE 4.78 CTS GTT 37
Gem Traders
53.24 - - yes 3 days

December 3, 2009

Gemrock Auctions has plenty to catch the eye

Filed under: Diamonds — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:59 pm

Take a look at a very small part of what’s available at Gemrock Auctions today, and get your bids in in time to win lots for the Christmas season.

CERTIFIED PINK ARGYLE DIAMOND 0.16 CARATS J449
opalplus
640.00 - 0.16 yes 4 days 3 hours
CERTIFIED AUST CHAMPAGNE DIAMOND PRINCESS CUT SI1 .62CT PM36
opalplus
646.00 - .62 yes 6 days 23 hours
CERTIFIED AUST CHAMPAGNE DIAMOND ROUND CUT SI1 0.78CTS OD657
opalplus
912.00 - .78 yes 6 days 23 hours

November 27, 2009

Diamond News on the Web

Filed under: Diamonds — Tags: , , — admin @ 3:24 am

Their are two facets to collecting and wearing jewelry and/or precious gems. One is simply to do the collecting and learn the history of each indidivual piece, the other is to achieve an entry into the inner workings of the gem and jewelry industry itself, a task one can do these days because practically every institution puts its news arm out on the web.

Take the diamond industry.

If you want to read just the dry news of the industry itself, check out http://www.diamonds.net/news/, which contains links to such press releases as:

  • Charles & Colvard Shares Recover From Long Slump:
    Stock maintains $1 closing price for 10 consecutive days.

    Jewelry & Watch Exhibit Opens in Ho Chi Minh City: Improved standard of living boosts jewelry’s appeal.

    Flawless Diamond Receives First Major Gold Jewelry Order: Sidhh Jewellers Dubai orders $3.9M of designer gold jewelry.

    World Bank Approves $4M Sierra Leone Grant : Related mining project to improve sector management and regulation.

  • A website that has much more interesting articles is:
    http://www.diamondne.ws/
    with such articles as:

  • Liquidation Begins of $6M+ in Diamonds and Precious Gems Inventory
    Norman J. Gallivan, Inc., of Indianapolis, has kicked off the anticipated liquidation sale featuring Downey Creation’s former inventory of

    Lucara Increases Placement to C$110 Million – Funding to be used for AK6 Diamond Project
    Lucara Diamond Corp. has increased the private placement announced on December 1, 2009 from Cdn $100 million to an aggregate of up to Cdn $110 mi..

    James Allen Reveals New Diamond Imagery
    For over a decade, JamesAllen.com has prided itself as a pioneer in cutting edge, user-friendly technological innovation. Continuing in that rich tradition…

  • November 25, 2009

    Magazines of interest to gems, rocks and minerals

    Filed under: Literature — Tags: , , , — admin @ 3:02 am

    Every hobby develops its own literature.

    For collectors of rocks and gems (I”ll get to jewelry enthusiasts in a different entry!) there are such magazines as:

    Rock & Gem (rockhounds.com/ which has joined forces with Rock & Gem.

    Gems & Gemstones (www.gia.edu/research-resources/gems-gemology/index.html is a print magazine for the professional gemologist, and is priced accordingly.

    The Mineralogical Record (www.minrec.org/ is “the mineral collector’s knowledge base.)

    Rock and Minerals (rocksandminerals.org/): “Amateurs as well as professional scientists delight in and pore over Rocks & Minerals, which has published feature articles on mineralogy, geology, and paleontology since 1926. Regular departments explore such topics as minerals for the collector; microminerals; recent books, videos, and DVDs; coming events; museum news; and personalities in the field. Detailed lists of collecting opportunities in specific localities are published periodically, as are special theme issues. Spectacular color photographs appear throughout each issue.”

    November 23, 2009

    Silver vs sterling silver

    Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — admin @ 4:52 am

    Fine silver (99.9% pure) is usually too soft to produce large objects that are to have a function (such as silverware); so, the silver is usually alloyed with another metal to give it strength.

    This alloy is called sterling silver. It consists of 92.5% by weight of silver and 7.5% by weight of other metals, usually copper.

    Manufacturers are always experimenting with other metals toreplace the copper, in order to improve various properties such as reducing casting porosity, eliminating firescale, and increasing resistance to tarnish.

    The metals they experiment with include germanium, zinc and platinum, as well as a variety of other additives, including silicon and boron.

    However, no one alloy has emerged to replace copper as the industry standard, and alloy development is a very active area.

    What is firescale?

    When sterling silver is heated in air for processes such as soldering and annealing, oxygen reacts with copper in the alloy to form a dark coloured copper oxide known as ‘firescale’. At elevated temperatures, silver absorbs oxygen: this enables copper to oxidise below the surface of sterling silver, thus causing firescale to penetrate deep into the alloy.

    This sterling silver watch had originally been silver plated to hide the firescale. The dark stain is, however, clearly revealed where the plating has worn away.

    Firescale is removed or disguised by various processes. These processes add extra labour costs and often incorportate the use of harsh chemicals, e.g. cyanide.

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