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1.50 Ct. Spinel from Tanzania
This loose stone ships by Jan 6
Item ID: | K18852 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 6.29 Width: 5.35 Height: 4.78 |
Weight: | 1.50 Ct. |
Color: help | Blue |
Color intensity: help | Intense |
Clarity: help | Very Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Emerald Cut |
Cut: | Emerald Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Tanzania |
Per carat price: help | $600 |
This 1.50 carat blue spinel from Tanzania presents a textbook example of how material properties and masterful cutting combine to produce a gem whose sparkle is both deep and disciplined. The stone measures 6.29 by 5.35 by 4.78 millimeters and is fashioned in a classical emerald cut, with broad step facets on the crown and pavilion that accentuate broad flashes of color rather than the small dispersed scintillation typical of brilliant cuts. Clarity has been evaluated at eye level as very very slightly included, which in practical terms means the stone reads visually clean, with inclusions that neither disrupt light performance nor distract from its uniform rich blue tone. Color intensity is described as intense, and because this spinel is natural and untreated, with no enhancement, the hue you see is intrinsic to the crystal. The excellent polish and precise facet junctions further contribute to a refined face up presentation, and The Natural Gemstone Company stands behind the provenance, grade, and physical measurements provided.
The optical and structural characteristics of spinel are central to understanding its distinctive sparkle, and this material offers specific advantages. Spinel crystallizes in the cubic system, making it optically isotropic, which means it lacks birefringence and pleochroism. The practical effect of isotropy in a highly transparent stone is a uniform color saturation under varied lighting angles, and a lack of doubled facet images that can soften contrast. Spinel also has a relatively high refractive index, in the range of approximately 1.712 to 1.718, which supports strong internal reflection and a lively return of light when facets are well executed. Combined with a Mohs hardness of about 8, this promotes both brilliance and durability, allowing for crisp facet edges to remain well defined through normal wear. For connoisseurs who appreciate technical clarity, these crystallographic properties explain why a well cut spinel displays a different quality of sparkle from many other gem species, a sparkle that is driven by reflection and color depth rather than dispersion.
The emerald cut chosen for this piece is deliberately suited to the material, and the faceting geometry is an essential part of its luminous signature. Emerald style step facets create long parallel planes that work as mirrors, producing sustained flashes of light that travel across the table and move in broad bands as the stone or the observer moves. With the depth of 4.78 millimeters relative to its average span of approximately 5.82 millimeters, the pavilion is comparatively generous, increasing the optical path through the body of the gem and intensifying perceived color saturation. The trade off in such proportions is a more concentrated color face up, rather than a pale, dispersed appearance. The cutter has maintained tight symmetry and precise facet angles, resulting in strong facet contrast and clean, sharp reflections. The excellent polish ensures minimal surface diffusion of light at the facet junctions, so that light is reflected internally and returned to the eye in well defined planes, producing the hall of mirrors effect that collectors often describe as a more architectural type of brilliance.
For design and setting considerations, this blue spinel rewards secure mounting that allows the emerald cut gallery to breathe, preserving the depth based color and reflective planes. Because the stone is untreated, with no thermal or diffusion enhancements, and originating from Tanzania, it will age and wear predictably, retaining its balance of tone and internal reflection. In hand, or set as a center stone in a ring or pendant, the gem shows a poised and composed scintillation, not the aggressive sparkle of a brilliant cut, but a deeper, more saturated light play that reads as luxurious and rigorous. For buyers who are technically minded, this spinel represents a clear statement of material quality and craftsmanship, with each facet contributing to a cumulative optical performance that is unique to a well executed emerald cut on spinel. The Natural Gemstone Company offers this stone as an example of how natural crystallography, exacting faceting, and uncompromised surface finish come together to produce a gem whose sparkle is unmatched in its category, an object meant to satisfy both aesthetic and technical expectations.
























