GregS
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2012
- Messages
- 722
Hi Minous,minousbijoux|1377833475|3512283 said:So does 10+ ct put it up at a collector stone level? Did the purchaser tell you how much they love it? Was it hard to say goodbye to another of your creations? How long did it take from rough in hand to completion?
Hello doorman,doorman|1377858568|3512345 said:Excellent work. Thanks for taking the time to document the process. I believe you said 42% yield. Was this before or after your preform?
Hi Chrono,Chrono|1377863855|3512364 said:The yield is very high. Let's presume you kept the high crown and small table; how much yield could you have achieved?
Had this been a crystal that I spent $200 on, I may not have given much thought to how nice it is/was. It would be just another piece in my stock. But this was a very pricey piece even for those gem merchants who only handle high end goods. So looking at it in my shop lights compared to the buying environment in Bangkok - well, it sorta took my breath away as it was a little nicer color 'over there'. So yeah, in the white background with 5000-Kelvin lighting I was a little concerned. 20 years ago there may have even been some perspiration showing on my browFirst, you said at the outset that on a light colored background "it does not look really promising." May I ask why you said that? While I see a perceived difference in the saturation intensity between the paper shot and your in hand shot, to my untrained eye, it does not look huge. Can you say more about what you saw and why you were concerned with the stone in the paper shot?
The use of a sticky kind of wax to adhere gem rough for lapidary work goes back a long time. Probably 200 years or more. The black type shown in some of my photos is known as "Banker's No. 6" and I believe it has been manufactured since 1906. It is tried and true. As a wax, it has a fairly high shellac content, and when in a liquid/molten state has quite a capacity to adhere to substances (including my fingers when clean!).Second, dops and wax. It seems so counter-intuitive to me that wax can hold/glue something as impervious as stone to a surface. I just don't get it! Is it almost like a vacuum seal is created? Glue I understand, but wax seems so malleable and benign, like it would be unable to compete with the stone. Any thoughts to help us get it?
Roger Dery|1377899378|3512632 said:I am hopeful this is useful info and not too technical. Sometimes going down the explanation path isn't all that much fun - for the reader
minousbijoux|1377833475|3512283 said:So does 10+ ct put it up at a collector stone level? Did the purchaser tell you how much they love it? Was it hard to say goodbye to another of your creations? How long did it take from rough in hand to completion?
I'll ask you my serious questions tomorrow - about rough and dopping.
Thanks again.