RUBY MARKET INFORMATION

Gemval, an approved data supplier for the valuation data and pricing indexes for the Market News Service, International Trade Centre UNCTAD/WTO, Geneva, has historical data charts and graphs indicating an Asian ruby of 2 carats (medium strongly purplish Red; strong (Burma, heated) has appreciated in value 37.20% since July 2005. If the price in July 2005 was, for example, $2000 a carat it is now $2750 per carat. Colored gemstones, in general, have appreciated 26%.


This big, natural, certified, emerald shaped ruby has the vivid red crimson color so prized in Vietnamese rubies. This ruby was specifically cut to put into a ring and its fire and brilliance when viewed from a short arm distance in dull light is remarkable.

The photographs and movie below show a magnificently radiant cushion cut VVS ruby, large size and unusual brilliance. You will not see many ruby video displays as they tend to show a ruby's dull color and every flaw.

If you purchase this ruby please take the time to compare it to any similar size ruby you can access. You will then appreciate the fire and quality. Free shipping is offered if you can identify the background music.

Technically the color of this ruby is Asian which means 90% crimson and 10% magenta with a fantastic 6/6 value(tone)/saturation (vividness) index GIA rating - see chart below. Certification is provided with the ruby.


Pieces:
One

Type: Natural ruby





Color: vivid crimson red
Cut: Octagon stepped





Weight: 6.00ct.

Size: 9.50x8.40x7.19mm





Clarity: VVS - (GIA Type 2)

Luster: spectacular





Enhancement: Advanced Heat
Origin: Vietnam

PLEASE NOTE: My movies and presentations are of the actual gemstones... the visuals are done both to test me and entertain you. If I did not embrace the challenge I most likely would not be selling gemstones! Should you desire a free copy of the video please email me. Detail from my painting of white roses completes the presentation.






   

6.00ct Finest CrimsonMagenta Vietnamese

 Emerald  Cut Red Ruby


 






 






 








 


Cowdisley Designed Sample Ring -Made
To your Choice

 

These photographs are extreme enlargements made by me under very bright lights with a macro lens so you can observe the gem's clarity, and of course, a magnification of any flaws. Monitors vary so I have little control over the color on your screen only to say these were made for a gamma corrected flat screen monitor with colors as close as possible to the original.

All gems have been inspected by a qualified gemologist and are guaranteed as natural. At Admiral Cowdisley I am committed to top customer service, and quality material. Email is encouraged with any questions. I will try to respond to email within 24hrs.

Notes on Ruby Treatments

Sometimes a ruby will have dense silk clouds and a strong purplish color, making the stones look like low-grade, cloudy rhodolite garnet. This is mainly due to the crystal's unusual blue cores. Ordinary heat-treatment removes the blue, as well as removing silk, making the final product a rich, clear red. The market generally accepts such heated stones without a quibble.

Some rubies are heavily fractured and Thai burners have combated the cracking by healing the cracks with a flux such as borax. Heating the stones with borax and other chemicals actually melts their surfaces, including the surfaces of cracks. The corundum within this molten material then redeposits on the fracture surfaces, filling and healing the fractures shut. Undigested material cools into pockets of flux glass. Essentially this amounts to a microscopic deposition of synthetic ruby to heal the cracks closed. This treatment is permanent and irreversible, the remnant pockets of flux will not drain out in the future, nor can they be removed.This treatment actually improves a stone's durability, since the fractures are healed shut. In many respects, it is a welding of fractures, similar to the joining of two pieces of metal with heat and a flux to lower their melting point.

The thing is that nearly all rubies in Thailand show some residues so we must assume they have been flux healed. The amount of residue in the ruby determines how little or many cracks were healed. If there are 'residues insignificant' then there has been very little healing, if any at all.

The term 'glass filling' is very misleading as many 'chemicals' are added to the heating process, and the folk who do the treatments are extremely secretive about their process. This has created a very real problem, where the enhancement is generally accepted by Thailand-based dealers/gemologists, but rejected by those outside the country. The result is that goods are returned amidst much name-calling and hand-wringing, a situation from which only lawyers will benefit. Compounding the problem is the fact that laboratories around the world do not have uniform methods of describing or dealing with this enhancement. Some cannot even properly identify it or distinguish between naturally-occurring inclusions and the flux healing.

My own opinion, for what it is worth, is that if the changes are permanent and the ruby is clear with good color it certainly worth collecting. As to the cost; a 2ct. unheated, clear ruby might fetch $10,000 per carat whereas ruby of similar quality that has been treated might be purchased for one tenth that amount.

Also 99% of rough ruby is heated to improve the color. Sometimes it works and sometimes not.  If however a top class ruby is added to the process nothing much changes in that ruby. It comes out exactly as it goes in... perfect. At Cowdisley we offer those and the top 10% of the 10% remaining, the cleanest, best cut and most vibrant and colorful rubies we can find. 

 


 
All my rubies come with a gem certificate.
 
GIA CLARITY GRADING USED BY COWDISLEY

Different gem labs grade clarity in colored gemstones differently. Cowdisley uses the GIA (Gemological Institute of America) Colored Gemstone Grading Scale. According to the GIA – perhaps the world’s best known and trusted Gem Association and Lab, there are THREE different charts for grading colored gemstones (and Diamonds). Perhaps the one that most jewelers are familiar with is the Type 1 Gemstone Chart, which includes the grading of Diamonds. The Chart that a gemstone is graded in is dependent on the physical characteristics of the majority of a particular gemstone; such as Ruby being graded as a Type 2.. The charts and the gemstones that fit into each are as follows:

 

  TYPE I
Usually eye clean
Aquamarine, Chrysoberyl, yellow and green, Heliodore, Morganite, Quartz, smoky, Spodumene, all Tanzanite, Tourmaline, green, Zircon, blue
TYPE II
Usually included
Andalusite, Alexandrite, Ruby, Sapphire, all,Garnet, all Iolite, Peridot, Quartz, ametdyst, citrine, ametrine, Spinel, all, Tourmaline, all but green, red and watermelon, Zircon, all but blue
TYPE III
Almost always included
Emerald, Red Beryl,Tourmaline: red and watermelon
VVS Minute inclusions, difficult to see under 10X. Eye clean. Minor inclusions, somewhat easy to see witd 10X. Usually eye clean. Noticeable inclusions under 10X. Usually eye clean.
VS Minor inclusions, somewhat easy to see witd 10X. Usually eye clean. Noticeable inclusions under 10X. May be eye visible. Obvious inclusions witd 10X. May be eye visible.
SI1 Easily noticeable witd 10X. Slightly visible to tde unaided eye. Usually low relief. Obvious inclusions, large or numerous under 10X. Apparent to unaided eye. Prominent to unaided eye.
SI2 Easily visible to tde unaided eye. Usually low relief. Obvious inclusions, large or numerous under 10X. Very apparent to unaided eye. Very prominent to unaided eye.
I1 Moderate effect on appearance or durability. Moderate effect on appearance or durability. Moderate effect on appearance or durability.
I2 Severe effect on appearance or durability. Severe effect on appearance or durability. Severe effect on appearance or durability.
I3 Severe effect on both appearance and durability. Severe effect on both appearance and durability. Severe effect on both appearance and durability.
Dcl
 
Not transparent Not transparent Not transparent

 



Gemstone Enhancement Codes
N F G H O T D HL
None Filling, Infilling or Stabilizing Irradiation Heat Enhancement Oiling/Resin Infusion Treated (berylium) Dyed Heat Enhancement/Lattice diffusion
 

The GIA nomenclature also specifies six levels of saturation ranging from "grayish" (neutral grey) to "moderately strong" to "vivid." The term "intensity" is also used to describe a stone's saturation.

Gemstone Saturation Chart

Gemstone Color Grading System - Saturation

To describe the darkness or lightness of a colored stone, the GIA system has nine levels of tone ranging from "very very light" to "very very dark." A numerical value is assigned to each label for use in a grading report.

Gemstone Tone Chart

Gemstone Color Grading System - Tone



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Customer Satisfaction: If for any reason you are not completely satisfied with your purchase please send us an email stating your concerns and we will try to solve the problem. Returns are accepted for legitimate reasons within 7 days of delivery. Returns must be approved via email and an RGA (Return of Goods Authorization) code must be given prior to returning any item. Specific return instructions will be provided along with RGA code.

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