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Ruby
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Ruby is the birthstone of July &
the anniversary gemstone for the 15th and 40th years of marriage.
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Ruby's day is Tuesday, its season summer, and its apostle St. Matthew. The
scarlet-colored gem is July's birthstone under the sign of Cancer, is said to
accord wearers wisdom, happiness and health, and to bring particularly good
luck to gamblers and lovers.
Rubies are more than talismans or good-luck charms, not only historic and
exotic but also valuable. Value is a human set of conditions: gems must have
rarity, durability and beauty. Great rubies display all three hallmarks. Rubies
- especially fine rubies - are rarer than diamonds, emeralds or sapphires. The
beauty of their color is without peer. And their durability is often a surprise
to new buyers.
On the famous Mohs hardness scale of 1 to 10, everyone knows that a diamond, as
the hardest natural substance on earth, rates a 10. Rubies, at Mohs 9, are
harder than any other material except diamonds. You may already have noticed
that rubies and sapphires are often paired. For good reason. They belong to the
same family, corundum, the crystal form of aluminum oxide.
Fine rubies are the most expensive of all gems (with the one exception - very
rare colored diamonds, such as red). It is safe to say that, outside of
museums, most people never see either large or fine rubies. Most of the
material sold today is commercial quality, usually small and heavily included.
If you own rubies, it is good to remember that hardness
and susceptibility to breakage are not necessarily related. Even though
exceedingly hard, heavily included stones may crack or chip when hit. Let
common sense be your guide. Remove jewelry before doing heavy work. Take care of your ruby by treating it gently and by keeping
your gems and jewelry clean. Lightly included stones usually go safely into
ultrasonic cleaners. Soaking rubies in alcohol (or vodka) overnight loosens
stubborn debris, which then can be rinsed and brushed away. Always use a soft
brush but no abrasives, not even toothpaste; such abrasives will not hurt
rubies but will scratch the softer gold or platinum settings.
Some of the famous rubies recorded were a 98- and 74-carat pair, a 400-carat
rough that was later cut to produce a 70-carat finished jewel, a 45-carat gem
said to have sold in Mandalay and a 20-carat jewel sold in Calcutta.
When buying, use a few simple guidelines. Size, quality, color and price are
absolutely related. You can get a ruby twice the size for the same price if you
are willing to have one with less than half the color and quality. When one
feature improves, others have to come down to hold the same price.
Shape is a personal preference. Most rubies are fashioned as ovals or
cushion-cuts. But there are emerald-cuts, rounds and more if those set your
heart pumping. Cutting standards are far more relaxed for colored stones than
for diamonds. Most rubies are faceted overseas, producing what the trade calls
"native cuts." Dealers here often have to recut off-center which produces
asymmetrical gems.
Clarity guidelines are not as rigorous with rubies as with diamonds because a
natural flawless ruby is a virtual impossibility. Rubies, like emeralds, are
expected to have inclusions. If you ever see an almost flawless ruby, stop
where you are. Do not buy this ruby until you have had it tested.
It is perfectly reasonable as a gem customer to ask to see your stone with a
loupe or under a microscope. Look to see if the inclusions adversely affect the
overall look of the gem or if they are severe enough to threaten its integrity.
Fractures that reach the surface present risks. The less expensive the ruby,
the more inclusions you may see. Avoid inclusions so numerous as to make the
gem cloudy or even opaque.
Of course, color is everything with rubies. How much red can you afford? The
richer, deeper, better the red, the more expensive and rarer the ruby. Factor
color into your personal mix to decide what you want. Imagine a red without
undertones.. .a pure red. Your dream red may well be the vivacious color of
Burmese rubies.
Now imagine a can of red paint to which you add a little black. That darker
undertone would produce a color normally associated with rubies from Thailand.
Then suppose instead of black you add purple, another marketable ruby color.
Finally, suppose you have, instead of red, a paler color between light and dark
pink. As the buyer you will want to see these described and priced as pink
sapphires, but the seller may want to sell them as pale rubies. |
Ruby - Main Characteristics
| Classification |
Mineral |
| Hardness (Mohs Scale) |
9 |
| Molecular formula |
Al2O3 |
| Composition |
Aluminiumchromium oxide. |
| Crystal Shape |
Prizmatic. |
| Color/Spectrum |
Red gamma. |
| Atomic (Crystal )Structure
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Hexagonal. |
| Index of Refraction |
1.7 |
| Density (Relative) |
2.65 - 2.68 |
| Light interaction |
Vitreous to semi-transparent |
| Uses |
Jewelry, ornamental. |
Ruby Jewelry Collection
| BlueStarJewelry is pleased to present
Ruby Jewelry in classic and modern styles: ruby earrings, rings,
necklaces and pendants. |
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