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2.60 Ct. Purplish Pink Spinel from Burma (Myanmar)
This loose stone ships by Jun 7
Item ID: | K18613 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 8.59 Width: 7.3 Height: 5.14 |
Weight: | 2.60 Ct. |
Color: help | Purplish Pink |
Color intensity: help | Intense |
Clarity: help | Very Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Cushion |
Cut: | Mixed Brilliant Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Burma (Myanmar) |
Per carat price: help | $600 |
This purplish pink spinel is presented by The Natural Gemstone Company as a transparent, cushion shaped gem weighing 2.60 carat, with precise dimensions of 8.59 x 7.30 x 5.14 mm. The cutter selected a mixed brilliant faceting schema to balance optimal fire with saturated body color, producing a controlled interplay between crown brilliance and pavilion return. The mixed brilliant cut employs a brilliant style on the crown to maximize scintillation and a modified step arrangement on the pavilion to deepen color saturation and preserve weight, resulting in a lively appearance that still reads as intense face up. The crown height, table proportion and pavilion angles were executed with attention to symmetry and facet junction integrity, and the overall proportions yield a depth ratio of approximately 64.7 percent, which sits in the preferred range for cushion cuts seeking a balance between light return and color depth. This spinel is natural, unenhanced, and originates from Burma, Myanmar, where classic material often displays intense, saturated hues with a velvet like saturation on the table.
Color characterization for this specimen calls it purplish pink with intense color intensity, a technical assessment that references hue bias, tone and saturation independently. Hue describes the underlying chromatic bias toward the red and violet portions of the spectrum, and this stone exhibits a perceptible violet lift on a dominant pink base, a combination that yields a complex visual personality under different lighting conditions. Tone is in the medium range, allowing both body color and internal brilliance to read strongly, while saturation is intense, indicating a high concentration of chromophore that resists washing out in most illumination. Spinel is singly refractive and lacks the strong pleochroism seen in other species, which means the mixed brilliant cutting strategy focuses on maximizing single axis light return and controlled dispersion. The refractive qualities of spinel, paired with an excellent polish, permit crisp facet reflections and lively scintillation without excessive windowing, preserving perceived size while intensifying color depth.
Clarity grading for this piece is very very slightly included, evaluated at eye level, a designation that signals exceptional clarity for natural spinel yet acknowledges diagnostic microscopic features. Under magnification the stone reveals minute crystal inclusions and subtle growth zoning that are typical of Burmese spinel, with tiny octahedral crystal remnants and occasional fine feathering that do not compromise transparency. These micro features serve as natural fingerprints, providing verifiable identifiers that distinguish this natural gem from synthetic or diffused counterparts, and they can be correlated with known Burmese inclusion types by a trained gemologist. The inclusions interact with light in ways that can enhance character, producing micro scintillation and localized flash under direct light, and their presence is also an assurance of natural formation and absence of enhancement. Because there has been no treatment applied to modify color or clarity, the internal features are original to the crystal, and they provide provenance clues that increase both scientific interest and collector value.
From the perspective of craftsmanship and practical use, this spinel demonstrates excellent polish and careful facet execution, with crisp facet junctions and even symmetry that support stable light performance. The combination of a mixed brilliant cut and the measured depth ratio maximizes face up brilliance while maintaining the intense purplish pink presentation sought by connoisseurs, making the stone an ideal centerpiece for a fine jewelry commission or a curated collection. For ring settings, a bezel or half bezel will protect the girdle while allowing the mixed cut to exhibit strong crown brilliance, and a halo of calibrated melee can enhance perceived size while complementing the intense hue. For collectors who value origin and natural state, the Burmese source and absence of enhancement are significant, and The Natural Gemstone Company can provide detailed photographic documentation and a full inclusion description upon request to support appraisal and insurance. This spinel unites geological authenticity, precise cutting technique and aesthetic intensity, making it a technically satisfying and visually compelling choice for knowledgeable buyers.




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