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0.52 Ct. Moonstone from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
This loose stone is available to ship now
Item ID: | K4184 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 5.68 Width: 4.03 Height: 3.43 |
Weight: | 0.52 Ct. |
Color: help | Rainbow |
Color intensity: help | Light |
Clarity: help | Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Emerald Cut |
Cut: | Emerald Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Ceylon (Sri Lanka) |
Per carat price: help | $288 |
This specimen is a transparent rainbow moonstone, emerald cut shape, 0.52 carat, with precise dimensions of 5.68 x 4.03 x 3.43 millimeters. The cutting style is a classical emerald cut, executed as a step cut with concentric rectangular facets on the crown and pavilion that emphasize linear reflections and internal transparency. Clarity is graded as very slightly included when evaluated at eye level, a level that is particularly favorable for step cuts which expose interior characteristics more directly than brilliant cuts. Color intensity is described as light, which in this material context indicates a mostly colorless to faintly warm body tone that allows adularescent phenomena and spectral flashes to be viewed without heavy body color interference. Polish has been evaluated as excellent, with smooth facet junctions and minimal surface relief, and there are no enhancements applied to the stone, preserving its natural lamellar structure. The origin is documented as Ceylon Sri Lanka, a provenance known for structurally fine adularia and for material that often exhibits clean transparency combined with delicate spectral activity.
The facet architecture and lapidary choices for this emerald cut are deliberate and technically informed, aimed at balancing transparency with the preservation of adularescence and rainbow flash. Emerald cuts employ long step facets on the crown, a relatively large table, and proportioned pavilion steps that produce a hall of mirrors effect in high clarity stones. For a moonstone of this type the cutter oriented the rectangular table and step planes parallel to the predominant cleavage and lamellar planes, thereby aligning the facet normals with the layers responsible for scattering. This orientation increases the likelihood that incident light will encounter multiple internal interfaces at shallow angles, producing the soft bluish adularescence and the more discrete rainbow flashes characteristic of rainbow moonstone. Depth to diameter proportion is controlled to 3.43 millimeters thickness on a 5.68 by 4.03 footprint, a ratio that preserves structural integrity while allowing sufficient internal path length for optical interference. Facet junctions exhibit clean meet points, and facet symmetry maintains consistent angles across the crown and pavilion, which minimizes unwanted veiling and maximizes the directional purity of internal reflections.
Optical behavior in this emerald cut rainbow moonstone derives from its crystallographic lamellar microstructure, the interface contrast between feldspar layers, and the macroscopic geometry imposed by the step cut. Adularescence in orthoclase and adularia moonstones arises from submicroscopic exsolution lamellae and alternating layers with slightly different indices of refraction, producing coherent scattering that appears as a floating sheen that moves with the light source. Quantitatively, typical refractive index values for moonstone are in the range of approximately 1.518 to 1.526 with low birefringence on the order of 0.005 to 0.010, and a specific gravity near 2.56. These optical constants result in lower total internal reflection and weaker dispersion than stones such as diamond or sapphire, so the visual signature is a diffused, soft glow rather than high sparkle. Compared to cabochon cut moonstones the faceted emerald cut reduces the smooth, dome like adularescent veil, substituting focused linear flashes and internal spectral banding when the stone is oriented optimally. Compared to labradorite which can produce larger, more saturated labradorescent planes of color, this transparent rainbow moonstone emphasizes delicate spectral micro flashes and a translucent body, rather than broad color fields. Compared to opal which generates play of color through three dimensional diffraction from ordered silica spheres, moonstone’s interference based sheen is subtler and more laminar, lacking the pinpoint flashes and rainbow patches typical of opal, but providing a soft shifting glow that reads as ethereal and directional.
For the knowledgeable buyer considering use and setting this emerald cut rainbow moonstone offers particular advantages and constraints. The step cut vocabulary showcases clarity and internal phenomena, so rings and pendants that allow light to enter the table plane and allow for rotational movement will display the characteristic adularescence and rainbow flashes to best effect. Settings that expose the table and crown, such as four or six prong mounts or open gallery bezels, preserve the optical performance, while heavy bezels that cover the crown can mute the effect. The stone’s hardness in the range of Mohs 6.0 to 6.5 suggests care in daily wear, and the lack of treatments means the surface responds well to standard jewelry cleaning with mild detergent and soft brushes, avoiding ultrasonic or steam cleaning that could exploit microfractures. Origin from Ceylon Sri Lanka contributes to collector value because of typical structural quality and clarity associated with the region. At The Natural Gemstone Company we present this piece as a technically interesting example of a faceted rainbow moonstone, one that will appeal to buyers who appreciate the nuanced interplay between cutter decisions, crystallography, and optical outcome, and who seek a stone that reads as both gemologically informative and visually distinct in finished jewelry.




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