pandabee
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2012
- Messages
- 2,910
Re: LD, FrekeChild, and other blue and blue/green gem lovers
Yep, that makes perfect sense! Thanks for teasing it all out I feel like classic Paraiba tourmalines are the best example of a light tone but with vivid saturation, no? If only we all had buckets of money (or Paraibas )
minousbijoux|1361241773|3383887 said:pandabee|1361240584|3383861 said:minousbijoux|1361239382|3383825 said:Yes. Also, don't confuse tone with saturation. You can have a medium toned stone with vivid saturation and you can have a medium dark stone with low saturation, so the two are to a very large degree, separate. Just because you want a medium light to medium toned stone, does not necessarily mean you have to dispense with a high level of saturation.
Now one more time - you are looking for an oval at least 6mm wide and 8mm long, or am I confusing you with someone else?
Okay, I think I was using them interchangeably (bad CSer) so thanks for clarifying that. I am looking for medium light to medium toned blue/green with vivid saturation. Is the degree of saturation or the tone going to be what makes a stone more expensive/rare?
I am not entirely opposed to ovals but was initially looking more toward rectangular cuts. 8x6 I think is my minimum sweet spot. I think nielseel may have also been looking for an oval that size but I thought she found something already.
Okay, this helps.
Now to confuse things a bit. You know how I said that saturation and tone are separate? Well, while they are, it gets more complicated the lighter the gem color. There are few examples of light colored stones with vivid saturation (actually, none come to mind right now), because the lighter the tone, the less color it necessarily has and therefore saturation is impacted. If, for example, you take a light yellow stone and start adding dye, it will get more saturated in color until it can no longer be considered light in tone. While it will still be yellow, it will swing into being medium in tone due to the increased intensity of color, or saturation. You hopefully understand what I'm trying to convey. So that being said, you want a medium light to medium toned stone with as strong a saturation is possible, within your budget. I added the last part because yes, the stronger the saturation, the greater the price, unfortunately.
Yep, that makes perfect sense! Thanks for teasing it all out I feel like classic Paraiba tourmalines are the best example of a light tone but with vivid saturation, no? If only we all had buckets of money (or Paraibas )