- Joined
- Dec 6, 2014
- Messages
- 2,124
PrecisionGem|1452726169|3975654 said:jordyonbass|1447490602|3949551 said:Hi Acinom,
Thanks for the kind words, this week and it's events have been a bit rough - not just my personal ones but what's happened in Paris as well. I'm kinda just wanting it to stop and things go back to the normal boring drudgery where firemen rescuing kittens in a tree is front page news.
I've been trying to think of what shapes I want for the big chunk, a couple big asschers like Doug Menadue did were my first thought but I'm not sure I'd get as much back as I would for another shape.
I'm probably going to get the work done on the rough early next year, with the holiday season coming closer and wild summer weather on it's way I'm picking I'll be very very busy with emergencies at work and very very broke with the pressies I have to buy
New cutters, once they get past cutting marbles, often buy blue topaz and Quartz, as the rough is pretty cheap, especially in the lighter colors. The problem is, these two stone can often be the more difficult stones to polish. The extra time to work on a topaz, vs the low selling price often makes it not really viable to cut, unless you work with very large stones, but then the problems of polishing are even more magnified. Light blue topaz often sells for less than $10 per carat cut, so you really need to cut a large stone to make any sense in cutting the material. If you are going to cut topaz, then go for the London Blue or the Electric blue colors, as the selling price on these is higher.
Quartz is the same thing, it can be problematic to polish, and while deep colors can go for $30 to $60 per cut, stones under 2 or 3 cuts makes no sense. Unless of course you are cutting for the fun of it.
You hit the nail on the head - I'm basically learning at the moment and doing it for the fun of it which is why I bought the topaz. Doesn't hurt me too badly if I completely destroy the rough compared to sapphire or something more expensive