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0.65 Ct. Spinel from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
This loose stone ships by Apr 17
Item ID: | K22996 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 6.17 Width: 4.61 Height: 3.15 |
Weight: | 0.65 Ct. |
Color: help | Purple |
Color intensity: help | Dark |
Clarity: help | Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Oval |
Cut: | Mixed Brilliant |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Ceylon (Sri Lanka) |
Per carat price: help | $92 |
This transparent purple spinel presents as a precisely measured oval weighing 0.65 carat, with calibrated dimensions of 6.17 by 4.61 by 3.15 millimeters, and a length to width ratio of approximately 1.34, resulting in an elegant, slightly elongated outline. The overall depth to average dimension ratio calculates to roughly 58.4 percent, a proportion that contributes to the stone face up appearance and light return. The stone has been fashioned with a mixed brilliant cut, combining a brilliant facet arrangement on the crown with a step influenced pavilion geometry, to balance scintillation and controlled color saturation. The table facet has been proportioned to yield stable windowing characteristics, while the crown facets are angled to fragment incident light, producing small flashes of brilliance across the upper facets. The girdle presents a consistent thickness suitable for secure setting, and the symmetry of the oval outline has been maintained to optimize optical performance. The polish is graded excellent, with facet junctions cleanly defined and no abrasive marks visible at typical examination distances.
Color assessment shows a dominant purple hue with dark color intensity, indicating a deeper tone and strong saturation that emphasizes a rich violet leaning character when viewed face up. Under directional lighting the stone exhibits slight variation in tone across facets, a consequence of the mixed cut and the material s intrinsic interaction with light, which can give rise to subtle pleochroic effects in some spinel crystals. The clarity is graded slightly included when evaluated at eye level, and the stone remains transparent, allowing light transmission with minor internal features that are characteristic of natural spinel. These inclusions are well distributed, and they do not significantly interrupt the visual flow of color, nor do they compromise the structural integrity of the crystal. Importantly, this spinel is reported without any treatments or enhancements, a natural, untreated specimen from Ceylon Sri Lanka, a locality historically revered for producing spinels with fine hue richness and stable crystal habit.
From a lapidary and craftsmanship perspective, the decision to execute a mixed brilliant cut on this material reflects a technical intent to maximize both color saturation and dynamic light return. Spinel has no cleavage and strong crystal strength relative to other gem materials, yet the cutter must negotiate internal features and optimal pavilion depth to avoid windowing or dead zones. The pavilion facet architecture used here reduces excessive leakage of light while preserving a pleasing play of small brilliant flashes, an approach that benefits darker toned stones by maintaining face up depth of color without making the gem appear opaque. Facet counts and facet angles have been calibrated to the gem s proportions, with careful consideration given to crown height and pavilion slope to preserve the stone s transparency and to emphasize the purple hue. The excellent polish is the result of meticulous final lap work, producing crisp facet junctions and a glasslike reflective plane, which is especially important for darker stones where surface quality directly affects perceived luster. Jewelry designers will find the dimensions and proportions favorable for solitaire rings, pendant centers, or as a matched accent in multi stone compositions, and the consistent girdle thickness supports a variety of mounting techniques.
Beyond its gemological attributes, this purple spinel is associated with a range of metaphysical qualities valued by crystal practitioners and collectors, and such associations can inform the intent of the wearer or designer. Purple spinel is commonly regarded as a stone that supports spiritual insight and contemplation, frequently linked to enhancing mental clarity and encouraging a reflective state. Practitioners often attribute to purple spinel properties of emotional stabilization, suggesting that the stone can assist in transforming scattered energy into focused resolve, and in alleviating mental fatigue during periods of creative or spiritual work. The deeper tone of this particular specimen is thought to lend grounding qualities while simultaneously opening access to higher contemplative states, a useful combination for meditation or ritual practice aimed at aligning intention with mindful action. Many users place value on spinel as a talisman of resilience and rejuvenation, claiming it fosters renewed confidence and the ability to overcome setbacks, though such effects are experiential rather than clinical. The Natural Gemstone Company offers this gem as an untreated, artisanal example of Ceylon spinel, suitable for connoisseurs and designers who appreciate both the technical excellence of the cutting and the traditional metaphysical associations attributed to purple spinel.




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