Wonderful, meet points accurate, polish flawless and on a gem that isn't easy to cut. Lots of time to get the diamond to cut and polish sapphire; as always beautifully done. Thanks for another fine gem cutting and polishing.
Good show ! You showed the students another tool - Benzyl Benzoate . A whole lot safer to use than Methylene Iodide I've seen others use. Take notes, folks ! On the subject of polishing girdles. My lapidary background is mainly opals. Like you polishing the girdle, I always polish the backs of my cabochons. It looks better & more professional to me . I hate seeing all those commercial opals out there with unpolished backs. Lovely rough & lovelier work ! Looking forward to your next creation !
I've been fascinated by shiny stones since a child,now I'm retired I would love to learn how to cut some. I'm in Scotland,(no gem mines here,yet)so not many 'cutters' clubs around.you have a very calm and matter of fact way of teaching,so I recon I'll be watching and learning from your good self.As time goes by I'll hopefully do a reasonable job of watching and listening. So, no pressure then 💎👍😁😁😇
I like your mention of “Meet Point” faceting, your use of polished girdle facets is one that can aid in the stone coming to life by giving more colour play in the finished gem.. You do very good work and use the exact same methods that I use myself.. 🎉🎉🎉
Wow Cliff! I don't know how I missed this video. The reveal really shows what a great job you did cutting the stone. I've cut a few small sapphires and really appreciate your tip about using a 3,000 disk for the cut... I've always "attacked" the stone with a disk that is far too coarse. Thanks for the instruction and a very good video.
That is one stunning gem. I really like how you narrate the videos and explain so much about what you are doing what a fascinating job/hobby this is. My favourite stone is probably amethyst. Then tourmaline and spinel.
The whole works is fascinating indeed! I was looking for exactly this full faced worked video on sapphire! I am extremely satisfied on your demonstration with full of details in every steps of the work process! Awesome! Thank you very much.
Awesome video. I went mining in North Carolina and came back with hands full of rubies and garnets. Looking forward to cabbing some and faceting some. Your video will help. I enjoyed the "rounding off" of the girdle. I also appreciate starting the prepolish with 3000 grit. Thanks!
Hi ,I am not a Gem cutter and enjoyed this video very much.I collect Gemstones from around the world but mainly Australia as I live in Tassie . I guess half would be cutting quality as most are large and I have boxes full .I have brought some found some and been given some.I am thinking of selling some as I am starting to collect coins.The gems are on the way out as I must keep my mind occupied .All the best on your quest.Cheers.
Thanks for watching. Shame you have to sell your gems. I must go to Tassie one day and find some Sapphires. There are not too many half decent sapphires in Victoria. Cheers
@@VintageTimeGems There is one good place here in Tassie for Sapphires I have a small jar full . I do have a couple of vegemite jars full of nice topaz.
@@nicklabellarte2390 I've been to Blaze N Gem's mine and classified 10 buckets of concentrate which is the closest I have come to actual mining. I've also been to Gem Mountain which is more touristy and basically a pay dirt site with a store, and wash stations, but it's not at the dig site itself. This is the site where they can heat or cut your gems locally, but they also send away. We actually got more curable gems at gem mountain which is the rock creek deposit than at Blaze's. I think it was just unlucky with the concentrate with Blaze. Only 2 small cuttable gems in 10 buckets. A little discouraging.
I have never seen a sapphire that colour before,but it’s a lovely stone and of course cut beautifully ..It’s always interesting to watch the stone coming to life from the raw pieces you have 😀
Because that color is usually heated to about 1000°F, to turn it blue, especially Montana, "Blue," ones. I prefer stones the way they are, as both faceter and wearer.
Hi Cliff! I'm a new subscriber and a beginner gem cutter. I have been working on some rough I got from Tim Petek. Do you have any videos that explain in detail the polishing stage? I always seem to have trouble getting a good polish with the 50,000 grit diamond. I am using an Ultratec with a BA5T lap with WD-40. I have a hard time seeing whether the scrathes have been removed with the oil sheen on the facets. Maybe I need better light. Also, I am not sure when to clean the lap, add more oil, or add more diamond. Any help would be much appreciated! Also, do you always polish the facets from the girdle toward the table or culet or does order not matter? Merry Christmas and thanks! Andrew
You will have to wipe the oil off else you cannot see the scratches....I use toilet paper. Polishing is the most difficult. Learn to polish Topaz...It's the easiest.
Your spot on with classing sapphire as a dearer gem , better off learning to fossick if you want larger stones ,, topaz are beautiful , the zircon is underrated
Hi Mark your right about fossicking. I do fossick, but Sapphired are over a1000 kms away in Queensland. What's in Victoria is to small to facet. However, the citrine and smokey quartz are nice in Victoria. Topaz is my favourite gem and Zircon comes close second followed by Spessartite. I can be contacted at vintagetimegems@aol.com
@@VintageTimeGems G'day matey ,First time viewer to your vids good job and you have brought back some very good memories and yep you're right some of the best gems are located in Queensland , Ruby vale and Sapphire QLD to be precise. I lived in Emerald for 7 years and 40 kms away was the fossicking area , mostly in Ruby vale. Got some great Topaz over the years , one was cut by a professional cutter in that area and once he finished , i had it appraised and it was $AU 14,000 , i have dozens upon dozens of gems from Topaz to Black Stars , i even have one Star which is shaped like a Great White Sharks tooth , very rare , so i am told. Anyway great video and thanks for the info. Cheers matey. Regards Eric
Wow your Sapphire looks wonderful. And I enjoyed the info you provided about where it was sourced. I agree about faceting the girdle though I have been taught to just round them on SRB. I think it looks more finished and sets craftsmanship a cut above what may be regularly practiced. Oh as a side note I located and purchased a copy of "The book of gem cuts" volume 1 year 1971. By Jack Alger where You shared your French Cut Diamonds diagram from. Aka French Star. Thank you for all you share. I am studying and absorbing as much as I can for when hopefully by the end of August I will be cutting gems again. With both my hands on the road to recovery. Thank you again Cliff.
Hi Tam, I would begin to learn how to facet a girdle on a SRB, it will look so much better. The "French Star" is exactly the same as what is referred to as a "The French Diamond Cut". It's difficult to source some of these early designs. I'm looking for a French Rectangular Design with specific pavilion cuts, but I have yet to find the design I'm after. Some of these earlier designs are really fun to facet. Regards Cliff
@@VintageTimeGems ohhh that french rectangular sounds interesting. Much luck in finding what you are searching for. Hmmm I wonder if my mentor may have or know more about what you are looking for. He has been cutting stones since before I was born and is a wonderful gent of 80 plus years.
Hi Cliff here is a cut I haven't seen in your videos. The "opposed bar cut" . Have you done them? Would you be willing to share a video of it. I am fascinated by the pixelated look of it on gems and plan to do one later this year.
That was the first stone on my new Poly Metric machine. 23 BIG & LONG facets. One would think with that few a facets the stones would not sparkle as they do. I'm currently finishing a piece of rose d' France in that cut. It is fairly easy to do compared to some of the fantastic doorknob sized beauties Cliff creates ; ^ )
Hey cliff beautiful stuff. I love to mainly watch Aussie content. Can’t get enough of it between yourself and Justin . Do you know of any other great channels out there on utube to peek at?
Wow didn’t think you could cut a sapphire into standard round brilliant thought sapphires be to dark but obviously get light coloured one can do it thanks for video and the tips in it
Years ago a goldsmith friend showed me how he photographed his jewelry: He used a camera system that was set up for photographing or transferring 35mm slides onto regular film. It was basically a camera set up at the correct distance to focus with a black background. With everything stationary he could arrange the light source or sources to produce the best picture. Maybe this will be of some help.
I literally have TONS of these sort of things in my area yet I cant bring myself to believe they are sapphire and not smoky due to the abundance of them SG test are inconclusive to say the least. Scratch test as well and are annoying for things about 7.5. What is the best test to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt sapphire?
HAHAHA...VAY KOCUM SENDEMI BASLADIN.. 🤣 BENIM AKLIMDAN DIS MACUNU GECIYORDU, PARLATMAK ICIN, BEN BASLAMADIM MAKINEM DE DAHA YOK AMA hobby olarak dusunuyorum, ama bayaaa..emekli/zahmetli bir is gibi gorunuyor. Ama sonuc guzel olunca emege deger.
@@8282turna Merhaba Cavus Sen soylemedin , ben soyleyim : parlatmada kullanilan malzeme cam ciziklerini gidermek icin kullanilan maddedir Ismide: Cerium oxid dir
@@8282turna Tabi ne tur bir tasi parlatacagina bagli Benim soyledigim : opal kwarts gibi Taslar icin uygundur, zaten you tube dekiler ne kullandiklarini genelde acikliyorlar, zaten elimde ne opal vaaar nede kwarts 🤣 ben yurt disindayim,(Hollanda) burada tas mas yok zaten , nasip olursa seneye izinde bir dag, nehir turunda buluruz Opal, kwarts her neyse en guzeli kendi buldugun taslari islemek , benim icin simdilik cerium oxid yeterli, once arabanin camindaki cizigi bir halledem🤣
I learn from everyone of your videos. What type of machine are you using? I have a super amount of Montana sapphires that need cutting. Thank you for teaching this old man stuff.
Beautiful stone. I so look forward to each and every one of your videos. Gemstones fascinate me, and I greatly enjoy learning as you cut them. Sapphire is one of my favorites, and that Madagascar example is exceptional. It must be hard to find deep, rich colours without heat treating. The final reveal showed just how brilliant a sapphire can be. There was a lot of sparkle and fire in it :D I do hope that you'll reconsider the Herkimer diamond, and that you can get a specimen soon. :D Wishful thinking, maybe, but you might enjoy the challenge. If nothing else, it should likely cut like a quartz.
This gem looks so much better in real life. If I can get hold of a clean Herkimer diamond with no flaws I will facet it and video it. Thanks for watching
Congratulations on doing such a fine job with such a piece of rough. Did you purchase more than one such piece? They are just the right size to make earrings for a woman with green-to-hazel eyes. Oh, and I think you did the right thing on the final reveal this time. The only thing I would have done different was to put a dark colored, preferably dark green, cloth on the table and then put that tiny what box on it rather have the entire background being white. Still, what you did worked. Are you planning to sell this one?
Hi Cliff Fantastic cutting I learnt something new by keeping the girdle thick helps setting the gem. Please can you do more 64 index cuts as I have this index wheel. Thanks
I think it makes no difference in dispersion looking down through the table. I've faceted other gems with a high RI similar to Sapphire with a continuous girdle and I can tell no difference. However, a faceted girdle looks so much better in a setting, and you can see that cut girdle facets do glint and reflect light in sunlight (particularly with larger gems). Personally, if possible a faceted girdle is a better option. If the gem was under 4mm in size, a continuous girdle would make life easier to facet.
I know these videos are older, but I just wanted to tell you I love these videos you have taught me a lot thank you very much
Your're welcome. Cheers Cliff
it's beautiful, always amazed me how people can facet those tiny gemstones into such a piece of beauty
Awesome video. Just the right amount of depth for this newbie to appreciate the technical skill needed for this little gem's journey.
How neat to see the work that goes into cutting a gemstone. Great close up photography and step by step explanations!
Thanks Lisa. Glad you enjoyed the video.
Wonderful, meet points accurate, polish flawless and on a gem that isn't easy to cut. Lots of time to get the diamond to cut and polish sapphire; as always beautifully done. Thanks for another fine gem cutting and polishing.
Good show ! You showed the students another tool - Benzyl Benzoate . A whole lot safer to use than Methylene Iodide I've seen others use. Take notes, folks !
On the subject of polishing girdles. My lapidary background is mainly opals. Like you polishing the girdle, I always polish the backs of my cabochons. It looks better & more professional to me . I hate seeing all those commercial opals out there with unpolished backs.
Lovely rough & lovelier work ! Looking forward to your next creation !
It might be a small gem, but gosh you get it to sizzle! Beautiful work, as always
Thanks Adam.
I've been fascinated by shiny stones since a child,now I'm retired I would love to learn how to cut some. I'm in Scotland,(no gem mines here,yet)so not many 'cutters' clubs around.you have a very calm and matter of fact way of teaching,so I recon I'll be watching and learning from your good self.As time goes by I'll hopefully do a reasonable job of watching and listening. So, no pressure then 💎👍😁😁😇
I like your mention of “Meet Point” faceting, your use of polished girdle facets is one that can aid in the stone coming to life by giving more colour play in the finished gem.. You do very good work and use the exact same methods that I use myself.. 🎉🎉🎉
Wow Cliff! I don't know how I missed this video. The reveal really shows what a great job you did cutting the stone. I've cut a few small sapphires and really appreciate your tip about using a 3,000 disk for the cut... I've always "attacked" the stone with a disk that is far too coarse. Thanks for the instruction and a very good video.
Such a skill to turn an ugly stone into this sparkling beauty. Thank you for sharing.
That is one stunning gem. I really like how you narrate the videos and explain so much about what you are doing what a fascinating job/hobby this is. My favourite stone is probably amethyst. Then tourmaline and spinel.
I am going to facet 4 Alexandrites and this is gonna be super useful. Thanks Cliff!!!
First time in my life Im watching how gems r being cut and polished.haha.keep it up
Thanks Edward.
The whole works is fascinating indeed! I was looking for exactly this full faced worked video on sapphire! I am extremely satisfied on your demonstration with full of details in every steps of the work process! Awesome! Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thanks again for demonstrating your skills. Awesome work
My pleasure!
Awesome video. I went mining in North Carolina and came back with hands full of rubies and garnets. Looking forward to cabbing some and faceting some. Your video will help. I enjoyed the "rounding off" of the girdle. I also appreciate starting the prepolish with 3000 grit. Thanks!
Thank you so so much for the video and your great teaching.
Thanks Talli......
Hi ,I am not a Gem cutter and enjoyed this video very much.I collect Gemstones from around the world but mainly Australia as I live in Tassie . I guess half would be cutting quality as most are large and I have boxes full .I have brought some found some and been given some.I am thinking of selling some as I am starting to collect coins.The gems are on the way out as I must keep my mind occupied .All the best on your quest.Cheers.
Thanks for watching. Shame you have to sell your gems. I must go to Tassie one day and find some Sapphires. There are not too many half decent sapphires in Victoria. Cheers
@@VintageTimeGems There is one good place here in Tassie for Sapphires I have a small jar full . I do have a couple of vegemite jars full of nice topaz.
its my first time see how to cut gemstone..thanks for info
Majestic cut.you brought that sapphire to life.just love it.
Thank you for inspiring me back to faceting .
Another beautiful piece!! So sparkly!!
only dreaming of getting to that level of art, always enjoy watching your work Cliff
Fun watch. I'm from MT and having hunted for sapphires, I was curious to see how they are cut. Very informative and interesting to watch.
Thanks for watching!
What’s your favorite local mine ? The spokean bar by Helena treated me nicely
@@nicklabellarte2390 I've been to Blaze N Gem's mine and classified 10 buckets of concentrate which is the closest I have come to actual mining. I've also been to Gem Mountain which is more touristy and basically a pay dirt site with a store, and wash stations, but it's not at the dig site itself. This is the site where they can heat or cut your gems locally, but they also send away. We actually got more curable gems at gem mountain which is the rock creek deposit than at Blaze's. I think it was just unlucky with the concentrate with Blaze. Only 2 small cuttable gems in 10 buckets. A little discouraging.
You did a great job on the sapphire. Thanks for making and sharing. (The photography is fine.)
Thank you jpdemont
.
Beautiful cut.
such a beautiful stone , I like corundum so much. exelent job
Love your work, I’m buying my tools now to try and give it a go ❤️
Thanks Donna...Happy faceting. Regards Cliff
I have never seen a sapphire that colour before,but it’s a lovely stone and of course cut beautifully ..It’s always interesting to watch the stone coming to life from the raw pieces you have 😀
Because that color is usually heated to about 1000°F, to turn it blue, especially Montana, "Blue," ones. I prefer stones the way they are, as both faceter and wearer.
Wonderful Cliff! Hugs, Susanne.
I have some Sapphires I found in Montana I'm going to facet when I get some more practice.
Huv
Work and art mixed together ❤ love from India🙏
Beautiful gem, I didn't know sapphire came in an almost peridot color.
Amazing cutting you have a magic in your hands 👍
Wow! Simply wow! Your work always amazes me.
What an interesting cut
Question, do you need to charge that tin lap before use? Or is the sewing machine oil and diamond compound?
Hello, what is the spindle speed of your machine?
for grinding and polishing sheet metal
The sapphire turned out really nice.
that instrument to secure/ glue the stone is a maravilla !
Hi Cliff! I'm a new subscriber and a beginner gem cutter. I have been working on some rough I got from Tim Petek. Do you have any videos that explain in detail the polishing stage? I always seem to have trouble getting a good polish with the 50,000 grit diamond. I am using an Ultratec with a BA5T lap with WD-40. I have a hard time seeing whether the scrathes have been removed with the oil sheen on the facets. Maybe I need better light. Also, I am not sure when to clean the lap, add more oil, or add more diamond. Any help would be much appreciated! Also, do you always polish the facets from the girdle toward the table or culet or does order not matter? Merry Christmas and thanks! Andrew
You will have to wipe the oil off else you cannot see the scratches....I use toilet paper. Polishing is the most difficult. Learn to polish Topaz...It's the easiest.
Hi Cliff, very interesting video, great work,loved the whole procedure from rough to gem, cheers Tim....
Thanks Tim.
Great video, amazing to see
Wow amazing job.
Thank you very much!
This is a great video. I'm learning a lot. Thank you.
😃👍
Thank you for the wonderful video.
Thank you too
Very very nice work
Absolutely beautiful!
Thank you! Cheers!
Your spot on with classing sapphire as a dearer gem , better off learning to fossick if you want larger stones ,, topaz are beautiful , the zircon is underrated
Hi Mark your right about fossicking. I do fossick, but Sapphired are over a1000 kms away in Queensland. What's in Victoria is to small to facet. However, the citrine and smokey quartz are nice in Victoria. Topaz is my favourite gem and Zircon comes close second followed by Spessartite. I can be contacted at vintagetimegems@aol.com
@@VintageTimeGems G'day matey ,First time viewer to your vids good job and you have brought back some very good memories and yep you're right some of the best gems are located in Queensland , Ruby vale and Sapphire QLD to be precise. I lived in Emerald for 7 years and 40 kms away was the fossicking area , mostly in Ruby vale. Got some great Topaz over the years , one was cut by a professional cutter in that area and once he finished , i had it appraised and it was $AU 14,000 , i have dozens upon dozens of gems from Topaz to Black Stars , i even have one Star which is shaped like a Great White Sharks tooth , very rare , so i am told. Anyway great video and thanks for the info. Cheers matey. Regards Eric
How do you ensure the facets are all the same width / depth? Is it by eye?
what faceting machine are you using? i like the actual mark settings on it
Wow your Sapphire looks wonderful. And I enjoyed the info you provided about where it was sourced. I agree about faceting the girdle though I have been taught to just round them on SRB. I think it looks more finished and sets craftsmanship a cut above what may be regularly practiced.
Oh as a side note I located and purchased a copy of "The book of gem cuts" volume 1 year 1971. By Jack Alger where
You shared your French Cut Diamonds diagram from. Aka French Star.
Thank you for all you share. I am studying and absorbing as much as I can for when hopefully by the end of August I will be cutting gems again. With both my hands on the road to recovery. Thank you again Cliff.
Hi Tam, I would begin to learn how to facet a girdle on a SRB, it will look so much better. The "French Star" is exactly the same as what is referred to as a "The French Diamond Cut". It's difficult to source some of these early designs. I'm looking for a French Rectangular Design with specific pavilion cuts, but I have yet to find the design I'm after. Some of these earlier designs are really fun to facet. Regards Cliff
@@VintageTimeGems ohhh that french rectangular sounds interesting. Much luck in finding what you are searching for. Hmmm I wonder if my mentor may have or know more about what you are looking for. He has been cutting stones since before I was born and is a wonderful gent of 80 plus years.
Hi Cliff here is a cut I haven't seen in your videos. The "opposed bar cut" . Have you done them? Would you be willing to share a video of it. I am fascinated by the pixelated look of it on gems and plan to do one later this year.
That was the first stone on my new Poly Metric machine. 23 BIG & LONG facets. One would think with that few a facets the stones would not sparkle as they do. I'm currently finishing a piece of rose d' France in that cut. It is fairly easy to do compared to some of the fantastic doorknob sized beauties Cliff creates ; ^ )
do you shape it by your self or do you set a shape for the gemstone in the machine? please tell me b/c it is very urgent!
Thanks my friend I can't wait to get my machine so I can faucet my diamonds and sapphires
Hey cliff beautiful stuff. I love to mainly watch Aussie content. Can’t get enough of it between yourself and Justin . Do you know of any other great channels out there on utube to peek at?
Thanks John. I enjoy watching Rookie Rockhounding. That a Aussie channel.
BEAUTIFUL GEMA
Beautiful!
Hi, can you please let me know if a 25% Benzyl Benzoate solution is okay to use as an immersion solution?
Nice Sapphire 👏👏👏
Very very cool
Another great lesson .Thank you mate .Your my mentor.
Wow didn’t think you could cut a sapphire into standard round brilliant thought sapphires be to dark but obviously get light coloured one can do it thanks for video and the tips in it
Is there somewhere you know of that I can go to be trained for gem faceting? I'm really into the proses, I'm just not sure where I might start.
That is just lovely.
Your a genius bro.
Thanks for sharing. Learned a lot. What was the final carat weight?
Around 0.8 carats
That is so....so ... awesome dude,,,,i really.... really love it...👏👏👏
He's an artist
Wished I could identify my stones. They "gemologist" wants to send them for testing. No way man!
Which oil u use sir?Can u send the exact name or link please
How long does it take to master this skill as an amateur?
Will you heat treat this gorgeous piece for blue colour or leave it as is?
Are there many Sapphires still found in Central Queensland?
*Great Job*
Years ago a goldsmith friend showed me how he photographed his jewelry: He used a camera system that was set up for photographing or transferring 35mm slides onto regular film. It was basically a camera set up at the correct distance to focus with a black background. With everything stationary he could arrange the light source or sources to produce the best picture. Maybe this will be of some help.
What is the best product, that you can recomend me for polishing an Emerald??
Thanks!! Greetings from Colombia!
Loving your Chanel!
8000 diamond grit pre-polish then a 50,000 diamond grit for final polish.
I literally have TONS of these sort of things in my area yet I cant bring myself to believe they are sapphire and not smoky due to the abundance of them SG test are inconclusive to say the least. Scratch test as well and are annoying for things about 7.5. What is the best test to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt sapphire?
Hello! Thank you for this great video, id like to become a gem cutter. Where do i learn?im in GC Australia. Thank you
Best thing to do to learn how to facet is join a local gem club. Cheers
Cliff is pretty good actually he plays like a noob, but he knows his hobby, better than most know their job.
hello i just started but i have a problem with polishing what do you use for polishing what are your polishing materials
I will be glad if you help
HAHAHA...VAY KOCUM SENDEMI BASLADIN.. 🤣 BENIM AKLIMDAN
DIS MACUNU GECIYORDU, PARLATMAK ICIN,
BEN BASLAMADIM MAKINEM DE
DAHA YOK AMA hobby olarak dusunuyorum, ama bayaaa..emekli/zahmetli bir is gibi gorunuyor.
Ama sonuc guzel olunca emege deger.
@@erkanorhan2986 Ben başladım.Çözdümde 4.mesleğim oldu darısı senin başına
@@8282turna Merhaba Cavus Sen soylemedin , ben soyleyim : parlatmada kullanilan malzeme cam ciziklerini gidermek icin kullanilan maddedir
Ismide: Cerium oxid dir
@@erkanorhan2986 Malesef öyle değil bu iş seryumla olmuyor Amerikadan geliyor benim malzemelerim
@@8282turna Tabi ne tur bir tasi parlatacagina bagli
Benim soyledigim : opal kwarts gibi
Taslar icin uygundur, zaten you tube dekiler ne kullandiklarini genelde acikliyorlar, zaten elimde ne opal vaaar nede kwarts 🤣 ben yurt disindayim,(Hollanda) burada tas mas yok zaten , nasip olursa seneye izinde bir dag, nehir turunda buluruz
Opal, kwarts her neyse en guzeli kendi buldugun taslari islemek , benim icin simdilik cerium oxid yeterli, once arabanin camindaki cizigi bir halledem🤣
what adhesive are you using please?
Devcon.
I learn from everyone of your videos. What type of machine are you using? I have a super amount of Montana sapphires that need cutting. Thank you for teaching this old man stuff.
Soo good, i learn alot, thanks
Beautiful stone. I so look forward to each and every one of your videos. Gemstones fascinate me, and I greatly enjoy learning as you cut them. Sapphire is one of my favorites, and that Madagascar example is exceptional. It must be hard to find deep, rich colours without heat treating. The final reveal showed just how brilliant a sapphire can be. There was a lot of sparkle and fire in it :D
I do hope that you'll reconsider the Herkimer diamond, and that you can get a specimen soon. :D Wishful thinking, maybe, but you might enjoy the challenge. If nothing else, it should likely cut like a quartz.
This gem looks so much better in real life. If I can get hold of a clean Herkimer diamond with no flaws I will facet it and video it. Thanks for watching
Amazing!
Thank you.
Congratulations on doing such a fine job with such a piece of rough. Did you purchase more than one such piece? They are just the right size to make earrings for a woman with green-to-hazel eyes. Oh, and I think you did the right thing on the final reveal this time. The only thing I would have done different was to put a dark colored, preferably dark green, cloth on the table and then put that tiny what box on it rather have the entire background being white. Still, what you did worked. Are you planning to sell this one?
How long does this take?
GRACIAS profesor
Thank you for video.
You are welcome
Excelente trabalho amigo
Meus parabéns 👍🤝👍
Looks fun I want to play in the shop
How much you charge to cut a stone?
That is such a lovely sparkler, I would love to see how you choose to have it set.
Thank you
This was a very interesting video. Never saw the faceting process before. Would your stone be considered a "Golden" Sapphire?
Yes, I would actually think this is a golden sapphire...Thanks for watching
I wish I had a sapphire that color 😊 I found a rough sapphire in North Carolina that’s yellow; but I don’t have any cut to put with it😓
You can get it heat treated to get the color you want but it has to be marked as treated
What is the make of the machine that you use please??
Hi Cliff
Fantastic cutting
I learnt something new by keeping the girdle thick helps setting the gem.
Please can you do more 64 index cuts as I have this index wheel.
Thanks
Thanks...There will be more vids with the 64 index wheel....
Cliff by adding the girdle facets does that effect the dispersion ? Improve it or no ?
I think it makes no difference in dispersion looking down through the table. I've faceted other gems with a high RI similar to Sapphire with a continuous girdle and I can tell no difference. However, a faceted girdle looks so much better in a setting, and you can see that cut girdle facets do glint and reflect light in sunlight (particularly with larger gems). Personally, if possible a faceted girdle is a better option. If the gem was under 4mm in size, a continuous girdle would make life easier to facet.
@@VintageTimeGems Thank you for taking the time and sharing your knowledge with me.
Thank you!