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1.55 Ct. Tourmaline from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
This loose stone ships by Dec 2
Item ID: | K18268 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 8.02 Width: 7.8 Height: 4.33 |
Weight: | 1.55 Ct. |
Color: help | Purplish Pink |
Color intensity: help | Medium Intense |
Clarity: help | Very Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Fancy |
Cut: | Mixed Brilliant |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | No Enhancement |
Origin: help | Ceylon (Sri Lanka) |
Per carat price: help | $330 |
This listing describes a single, transparent purplish pink tourmaline available from The Natural Gemstone Company, weighing 1.55 carats, and cut to a fancy shape with a mixed brilliant facet arrangement. The gem measures 8.02 x 7.80 x 4.33 mm, and it presents a medium intense color that sits between delicate pink and pronounced violet. The clarity is evaluated as very very slightly included at eye level, making the stone effectively eye clean in typical viewing conditions, and the polish is graded excellent. There has been no enhancement applied to this material, and the documented origin is Ceylon Sri Lanka, a region with a long history of producing gemstones of fine color and character. These factual attributes form the basis for assessment of both aesthetic performance and long term value.
When considered alongside famous gemstones from history, this purplish pink tourmaline occupies its own niche, distinct from the extreme rarities that headline auction rooms, and comparable instead in different dimensions of interest. The deep blue of the Hope Diamond captures attention through intensity and provenance, and the Pink Star diamond commands premiums for its pure vivid pink saturation and large size, characteristics that are rare within the diamond world. By contrast this tourmaline offers a refined balance of hue and transparency that is not about overwhelming saturation, but rather about a pleasing interaction of pink and violet undertones under mixed brilliant cutting. The Star of India sapphire from Ceylon achieved renown for its size and cabochon star phenomenon, traits not shared by this faceted tourmaline, yet they do underscore the historical strength of Ceylon as a source of notable gems. This tourmaline is therefore best understood not as a miniature version of those headline stones, but as an independent expression of color and cut, where its medium intense purplish pink, its clean appearance to the eye, and its tailored proportions combine to create visual appeal that is immediate and versatile.
From a gemological and design perspective, several technical points contribute to the unique value of this specimen. The mixed brilliant cut is intended to merge pavilion faceting that promotes return of light, with a crown arrangement that disperses color evenly across the table, yielding sparkle that complements the purplish pink hue. The dimensions produce a pleasing spread for a 1.55 carat weight, allowing the gem to read larger on the hand than an equivalently weighed deeper stone might, and the shallow to moderate depth helps maintain an open face up appearance. The clarity being very very slightly included means the cutting decision was able to prioritize optical performance without concealing significant material flaws, and the excellent polish enhances both brilliance and the accuracy of the table reflections. As a tourmaline, the material has a Mohs hardness near 7 to 7.5, which supports regular wear when set with conventional protective design choices, but it is not as hard as sapphire or diamond, so settings that reduce edge exposure and routine care practices are advisable. The absence of enhancement is an important quality marker, because many colored gems undergo treatments to modify or intensify tone, and an untreated natural color from Ceylon is a specific attribute that appeals to collectors and connoisseurs seeking unaltered material.
Provenance, comparability, and practical considerations complete the picture of value for this purplish pink tourmaline. Origin from Ceylon Sri Lanka links the gem to a long recorded history of gem producing districts, and while it lacks the fame of loss or legend that surrounds some historic stones, its origin does offer a contextual pedigree that is respected in the trade. In comparison to historically famous gems, this tourmaline should be viewed through criteria of color nuance, cut efficiency, and natural state, rather than through superficial comparisons of rarity defined solely by carat or celebrity ownership. The Natural Gemstone Company provides full disclosure of weight, dimensions, cut type, clarity grade, color intensity, polish, enhancement status, and origin, enabling an informed assessment. For collectors and jewelers the stone represents a balanced combination of attractive hue, dependable optical properties, and straightforward care, qualities that make it suitable for bespoke settings where the purplish pink color can be paired with complementary metals and side stones to emphasize its tone. This gem is particularly well suited to designs that allow the mixed brilliant faceting to interact with light, and it offers a natural, untreated Ceylon origin as a distinguishing factor in the market.




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