This Platinum ring is set with a centered Pear-shape Emerald surrounded by smaller baguette Diamonds.
Main Stone: Emerald
Main Stone Weight: 0.59ct
Secondary Stone: Diamond
Secondary Stone Weight: 0.99ct
Metal: Platinum
Metal Purity: 900 parts per 1000
Ring Size: 6.25
Item Reference#: R9704

Continue browsing our collection
Emerald
Emerald |
|
General |
Category |
Beryl variety |
Identification |
Color |
Green shades to colorless |
Crystal Habit
|
Massive to well Crystalline
|
Luster
|
Vitreous
|
Diaphaneity
|
Transparent to opaque |
Emerald
is a gemstone and a variety of the mineral beryl (Be3Al2(SiO3)6)
colored green by trace amounts of chromium and sometimes vanadium.[2]
Beryl has a hardness of 7.5?8 on the Mohs scale.[2] Most emeralds are
highly included,[3] so their toughness (resistance to breakage) is
classified as generally poor. Emerald is a cyclosilicate.
Etymology
The
word "emerald" is derived (via Old French: esmeraude and Middle
English: emeraude), from Vulgar Latin: esmaralda/esmaraldus, a variant
of Latin smaragdus, which originated in Ancient Greek: ?????????
(smaragdos; "green gem").[4]
Properties determining value
In the 1960s, the American jewelry industry changed the
definition of "emerald" to include the green vanadium-bearing beryl as
emerald. As a result, vanadium emeralds purchased as emeralds in the
United States are not recognized as such in the UK and Europe. In
America, the distinction between traditional emeralds and the new
vanadium kind is often reflected in the use of terms such as "Colombian
Emerald".[7]
Color
In gemology,[8] color is divided into three
components: hue, saturation, and tone. Emeralds occur in hues ranging
from yellow-green to blue-green, with the primary hue necessarily being
green. Yellow and blue are the normal secondary hues found in emeralds.
Only gems that are medium to dark in tone are considered emerald;
light-toned gems are known instead by the species name green beryl. The
finest emerald are approximately 75% tone on a scale where 0% tone would
be colorless and 100% would be opaque black. In addition, a fine
emerald should be well saturated and have a hue that is bright (vivid).
Gray is the normal saturation modifier or mask found in emerald; a
grayish-green hue is a dull-green hue.[6]
Clarity
Brazilian emerald (grass-green variety of the mineral beryl) in a
quartz-pegmatite matrix with typical hexagonal, prismatic crystals.
Emerald
tends to have numerous inclusions and surface breaking fissures. Unlike
diamond, where the loupe standard, i.e. 10× magnification, is used to
grade clarity, emerald is graded by eye. Thus, if an emerald has no
visible inclusions to the eye (assuming normal visual acuity) it is
considered flawless. Stones that lack surface breaking fissures are
extremely rare and therefore almost all emeralds are treated ("oiled",
see below) to enhance the apparent clarity. The inclusions and fissures
within an emerald are sometime described as "jardin" (French for
'garden'), because of their mossy appearance.[10] Imperfections are
unique for each emerald and can be used to identify a particular stone.
Eye-clean stones of a vivid primary green hue (as described above), with
no more than 15% of any secondary hue or combination (either blue or
yellow) of a medium-dark tone, command the highest prices.[6] The
relative non-uniformity motivates the cutting of emeralds in cabochon
form, rather than faceted shapes. Faceted emeralds are most commonly
given an oval cut, or the signature emerald cut, a rectangular cut with
facets around the top edge.
Continue browsing our collection