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3.77 Ct.Tw.Total Carat Weight Swiss Blue Topaz Pair from Brazil
This pair of stones is available to ship now
Stone type: | Topaz | Topaz |
|---|---|---|
Item ID: | PR14537 | PR14537 |
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 9.78 Width: 5.09 Height: 3.9 | Length: 9.94 Width: 5.08 Height: 3.89 |
Weight: | 1.85 Ct. | 1.92 Ct. |
Color: help | Swiss Blue | Swiss Blue |
Color intensity: help | Medium | Medium |
Clarity: help | Very Slightly Included | Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Radiant | Radiant |
Cut: | Radiant Cut | Radiant Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | Irradiation | Irradiation |
Origin: help | Brazil | Brazil |
Per carat price: help | $36 | $36 |
There is a long and noble lineage that accompanies a fine pair of Swiss blue topaz, a lineage that The Natural Gemstone Company is proud to carry into the present with these matched stones. This pair weighs 1.85 carats and 1.92 carats respectively, each fashioned into a radiant shape Swiss blue topaz that captures sky and sea in miniature. The gems measure 9.78 x 5.09 x 3.90 mm and 9.94 x 5.08 x 3.89 mm, dimensions that speak to careful planning from rough crystal to finished gem. They are radiant cut, with a clarity grade of very slightly included evaluated at eye level, medium color intensity, and an excellent polish. Enhancement by irradiation has been applied to reveal and stabilize the vivid blue that collectors and connoisseurs admire, and their origin in Brazil links them to centuries of gem producing heritage that blends natural bounty with human skill.
Topaz has carried symbolic weight through civilizations, prized by the ancients for supposed protective power, favored by royalty for its luminosity, and embraced by jewelers who value its durability and breadth of color. Swiss blue topaz, while a modern trade name, follows a much older story of minerals transformed by human knowledge, where heat and controlled irradiation refine tonality and vivacity without diminishing the gem enduring qualities. The Brazilian provenance of these stones connects them to the great pegmatite deposits that have furnished gem cabinets for generations, and the consistent medium color intensity of this matched pair ensures that they will harmonize with classic settings and heirloom designs. When you choose these stones you are choosing continuity, a design sensibility that values legacy, and a color that speaks in a language used since antiquity.
The radiant cut of these topaz gems is a study in craft and compromise between two venerable cutting traditions, step cutting and brilliant cutting. Where a step cut, such as the emerald cut, emphasizes long, elegant flashes and a reposeful clarity that celebrates internal character and color zoning, and where a full brilliant cut seeks maximal scintillation through a dense network of small facets, the radiant cut combines the virtues of both. Its trimmed corners and mixed facet arrangement create lively brilliance while maintaining broad windows of color, a quality particularly favorable to Swiss blue topaz. The cutters who worked these Brazilian roughs balanced pavilion depth with crown geometry to preserve weight and optimize light return, producing dimensions of 9.78 x 5.09 x 3.90 mm and 9.94 x 5.08 x 3.89 mm that reflect deliberate proportional choices. The excellent polish is the final testament to that discipline, smoothing each facet junction to allow uninterrupted play of light, and the very slightly included clarity grade means the gems present clean to the eye while retaining natural character to please the thoughtful collector.
As a matched pair these topaz stones are more than the sum of their measurements, they are partners designed for settings that celebrate symmetry and the timeless language of classical jewelry. The Natural Gemstone Company matched the pair not only by color but by weight, table proportions, and facet alignment, allowing them to sit in a matched earring, a refined three stone ring, or a pendant duo with poise. The irradiation enhancement is disclosed and accepted within modern gem practice, a controlled method that enhances color while preserving the stone structural integrity, and it is complemented here by conscientious cutting that privileges both fire and saturation. For those who value heritage and hand workmanship, for those who seek a design that will endure generations, these Swiss blue radiant topaz stones offer a compelling choice, a modern echo of an ancient devotion to material beauty, ready to be set, worn, and passed on.
























