- Stone12
- Reports3












10.34 Ct. White Jeremejevite from Namibia
Item ID: | K12039 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 12.84 Width: 11.23 Height: 9.17 |
Weight: | 10.34 Ct. |
Color: help | White |
Color intensity: help | Colorless |
Clarity: help | Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Radiant |
Cut: | Radiant Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Namibia |
Per carat price: help | $3,100 |
One beautiful transparent 10.34 carat radiant shape white jeremejevite with dimensions of 12.84 x 11.23 x 9.17 mm is available through The Natural Gemstone Company, and this stone presents a rare opportunity for a discerning collector or connoisseur of fine gems. The radiant cut combines the elegant rectangular outline with trimmed corners and a faceting scheme that maximizes light return for stones with slightly different crystal habits. This particular jeremejevite is colorless in intensity, offering a pure, crystalline appearance that reads as white to the eye, and it displays an excellent polish that allows the facets to snap and scintillate under light. Clarity has been assessed as very slightly included at eye level, which for educated buyers signals inclusions that are minimal, do not interrupt the gem’s transparency, and act as a natural fingerprint confirming its origin and authenticity. Importantly, this jeremejevite is untreated, no enhancement, and comes from Namibia, a source noted for producing high quality, collector grade specimens.
From a gemological perspective the combination of a 10.34 carat weight and the precise dimensions of 12.84 x 11.23 x 9.17 mm make this jeremejevite notable for both presence and proportional beauty. The radiant cut, executed with excellent polish, enhances the gem’s optical performance by balancing brilliance and dispersion, and by controlling light leakage within the stone. The very slightly included clarity grade means that, at typical viewing distances, the stone reads as eye clean while still retaining the microscopic characteristics that confirm it is natural. These internal characteristics are valuable to educated buyers because they provide a means of identification and provenance, and they influence both aesthetic and market value. In practical terms jeremejevite has a Mohs hardness around about 6.5 to 7, which places it in a category where it can be worn in jewelry with sensible protections and an appropriate setting design, though it requires more care than harder gemstones such as sapphire or diamond.
The Namibian origin of this jeremejevite adds a layer of desirability and trust for buyers who value traceable provenance. Namibia is known among specialists for producing jeremejevite specimens with good clarity and attractive colorless to pale hues, and an unenhanced stone from this region carries both historical and collector significance. Natural jeremejevite is rare in the marketplace, making high quality examples at this carat weight uncommon and sought after by museums, private collectors, and connoisseurs. The absence of enhancement, full transparency about clarity and cut, and a verified locality from Namibia are the kinds of attributes that informed buyers prioritize when building a curated collection or making an investment in tangible assets. The internal inclusions, described as very slightly included, serve as natural identifiers, and the excellent polish conveys the cutter’s skill in realizing maximum brilliance and beauty from the rough.
When comparing a natural jeremejevite of this quality to lab grown alternatives educated buyers should consider three principal advantages that natural stones provide. First, rarity and collectability are inherent to natural stones, especially to species such as jeremejevite that occur only in limited localities. The finite supply, combined with documented origin from Namibia, supports long term interest and potential appreciation in value, whereas lab grown stones are produced in controlled environments and are more abundant by comparison. Second, natural stones carry geological history and subtle chemical fingerprints that affect color nuances, inclusions, and optical behavior in ways that are unique to each specimen, creating aesthetic and scientific interest that lab grown stones cannot replicate. Third, market perception matters for resale and legacy value, and many collectors and investors continue to place a premium on natural, untreated material, particularly when it is well documented and of high craftsmanship. At The Natural Gemstone Company we emphasize responsible sourcing, full disclosure that this stone has no enhancement, and our readiness to assist with independent gemological reporting for buyers who require certification. If you seek a high profile, rare, and visually remarkable jeremejevite with proven Namibian provenance and transparent gemological attributes, this 10.34 carat radiant shape white jeremejevite represents a compelling option.























