Featured Stones
Featured Stones
from our monthly newsletter Palagems Reflective Index
This stunning pear-shaped imperial padparadscha dates back to the 1980s.
Here are a couple of rare collectable gems in the yellow spectrum.
Eye clean and bright color, these pieces have about 30% pinkish-red and 70% light yellowish-green.
Sapphire crystal, 25 mm, and Sri Lankan oval sapphire, 15.20 carats.
5.58-carat Burma spinel, 12.24 x 9.42 x 5.51 mm. Freshly picked from your friends at Pala. (Photo: Mia Dixon)
Natural Brazilian indicolite tourmaline, 21.49 carats, 20.9 x 12.6 x 10.2 mm. (Photo: Mia Dixon)
This is a special tourmaline from Nigeria. It is a very rare copper-bearing neon-blue tourmaline that can be referred to as paraiba.
This is a massive 15.2-carat oval brilliant with a pleasing violet-ish blue hue.
Today we see most of the peridot from Pakistan, Myanmar, China and the U.S., but these Zabargad peridots are elusive and very rare in larger sizes.
This 7.9-carat umbalite garnet has a striking color, unlike many we have seen come from the Umba valley in Tanzania.
This featured stone seems to become increasingly rare as time goes on, and its Nigerian deposit has long since dried up.