colored gemston
Many people purchase gems by type -- they want to buy a sapphire or atourmaline or an amethyst. But one thing we've learned in the colored gem business is that most customers are concerned above all with color, and are less concerned with gem variety so long as the stone they buy is durable enough for their purpose.
Finding gems by color can often be difficult, since websites tend to organize their inventory around gem varieties rather than colors. So for those who want to know what their options are in particular colors, here is a list of gem types organized by color. Since there are hundreds of color variations in colored gems, we have organized this list around "base" colors or color families. A red-orange ge
m would fall in the "orange" category and a blue-green stone in the "green" category. Red Red gemstones are actually quite rare, and mainly occur in ruby, spinel andgarnet. There is some very fine red tourmaline (sometimes called rubellite), but is not often found.
• Ruby • Spinel • Garnet • Tourmaline • Andesine • Zircon
Pink The most popular pink gemstones are tourmaline and spinel. Pink sapphire is lovely but rare. Rhodolite garnet tends to the purple-pink. For more about pink gemstones see our feature article on the topic.
• Sapphire • Tourmaline • Spinel • Rhodolite Garnet • Rose Quartz • Kunzite • Morganite
Blue The classic blue gemstone is sapphire. Deep saturated blue is also found inspinel and kyanite. There are a number of choices in the lighter blues, includingtopaz, zircon and aquamarine. Tanzanite and iolite are more of a violet blue, while paraiba tourmaline, apatite and fluorite tend to the blue-green.
• Sapphire • Tanzanite • Topaz • Zircon • Spinel • Aquamarine • Apatite • Lapis Lazuli • Tourmaline • Paraiba Tourmaline • Rainbow Moonstone • Iolite • Kyanite • Agate • Fluorite
Green The traditional green gem is emerald, but tsavorite garnet, chrome tourmaline and chrome diopside are good alternatives. See our feature article on chrome diopside for the recent history of the market for the finer green gemstones.Peridot, which tends more to the olive green, has become an important jewelry stone.
• Emerald • Tourmaline • Paraiba Tourmaline • Chrome Tourmaline • Tsavorite Garnet • Demantoid Garnet • Chrome Diopside • Peridot • Jade • Apatite • Sapphire • Aventurine • Prehnite • Agate • Ruby-Zoisite
Yellow/Gold Citrine is the most common yellow to gold gem, but yellow sapphire is highly sought after. There are also good choices in harder gems such as beryl andchrysoberl. Yellow tourmaline from Malawi is very rare.
• Sapphire • Citrine • Fire Opal • Tourmaline • Sphene • Zircon • Orthoclase • Chrysoberyl • Beryl • Spodumene • Quartz • Agate • Diamond
Violet/Purple The list of violet and purple gemstones is quite short. Amethyst is the classic example, though fluorite can also be found in an amethyst-like purple. There are wonderful violet hues in spinel, tourmaline and sapphire. Chalcedony frequently occurs in a unique lavender hue.
• Amethyst • Fluorite • Spinel • Tourmaline • Sapphire • Chalcedony
Orange Spessartite garnet is the most famous orange gem but there are a number of other options as well. Orange sapphire is produced by heat treatment, while the finer fire opal occurs in hues from yellow-orange to red-orange.
• Spessartite Garnet • Zircon • Fire Opal • Sapphire • Tourmaline • Imperial Topaz • Moonstone • Star Moonstone • Citrine • Andesine
White These category includes both colorless gems, such as diamond, sapphire, zircon and topaz, as well white gemstones like fire opal and moonstone.
• Diamond • Sapphire • Zircon • Moonstone • Topaz • Fire opal • Jade • Quartz • Agate
Brown/Bronze It is fair to say that brown is not the most popular color in gemstones. But there are some notable exceptions, such as the peach-orange-bronze of imperial topaz.
• Smoky Quartz • Tiger's eye • Agate • Tourmaline • Imperial Topaz
Gray/Silver There are very few gemstones which are predominantly gray or silver. In our experience the most popular is spinel, whose brilliance and single refractionshow gray and silver at its best.
• Spinel • Tourmaline • Fluorite
Black We occasionally stock black diamonds (produced by irradiation). But by far the most popular black gemstone is tourmaline. The black star sapphires only found in Chanthaburi, Thailand are also very popular.
• Diamond • Tourmaline • Onyx • Agate • Sapphire • Star Sapphire
Multicolor In the category of multicolor gemstones we list those gems which display multiple colors in a single stone. Some of these gems, such as tourmaline, fluorite and ametrine, have zones of different colors. Others, such as andalusite, are strongly pleochroic and display different colors from different angles.
Tourmaline • Fluorite • Andalusite • Opal • Sphene • Sapphire • Mystic Topaz • Mystic Quartz
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