Why heat?
Why settle for this
when you can have this?
Discoid Fractures
Sapphires often have other minerals within them. After heating, these little crystals look a little melted and often display a tension halo. This feature is also called a discoid fracture. They're pretty easy to spot under 10-30x magnification.
Rutile Silk
Before heating, you might see shiny needles of rutile silk within the stone.
The heating process dissolves the needles which can improve clarity. This is an example of "broken silk":
In some cases, the process releases the titanium into the crystal which will intensify the blue color.
Sapphires from our talented artists:
The SATeam blog features artisan handmade creations by the etsy starving artists jewelry team. SATeam members create handcrafted jewelry and beads. More information about our team and its current etsy shop owner members can be found at SATEAM.etsy.com
Sources:
http://gemologyproject.com/wiki/index.php?title=Heat_Treatment
10 comments:
Great information on such a beautiful gemstone. Love Cat's necklace.
Nice article! Oh, and thank you very much for including my earrings :)
I enjoyed that, very interesting. Thank you very much.
Very interesting post, I liked the comparing sapphire pictures in particular.
Thanks! Also for including my pendant :-)
I love learning more about the properties of a gems stone and your writings about sapphires was fascinating. Great pics and fabulous jewellery!
Very educational! You provided some good examples to back up the text.
Sapphires are one of my favorites. Thank you for the interesting information. I have to admit that I'd not known any of that!
Great article. I love knowing how the process of things work, and thanks for giving us a peek through the microscope.
Thank you for an interesting read. Very informative.
Awesome! The rock loving nerd in me totally loves this post. Kudos to you & thank you. ;-)
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