My grandpa used to take me rock hunting. He was very much into all things gem/mineral related. He got into cutting cabs and making bevel settings. He liked display pieces and things with stories behind them. My grandparents moved just south of Tucson, and yearly he was in heaven getting to go to the gem and mineral show every year. He'd help me identify rocks I found in river beds and share all this knowledge with me. He got me into gem collecting, and rock hunting. He'd crack thundereggs with me and send me jewelry he had made me. When he passed away he left me all his equipment and his rocks. I'd rather still have him, but he lives on in stories when I get to tell people where the 2 lbs malachite on the mantle came from or the time I was with him and found my favorite aventurine stone at a flea market, or even when he showed me how using my spit could make a random piece of Jasper I found on the ground look so brilliantly red. I loved being his little pebble pup.
I’ve been collecting gemstones for the past 17 years. The colors, sizes, and shapes are so eye-catching. I’ve never seen a bicolor Afghan topaz, but I have two very large bicolor topazes from Ukraine.
Sariafan93. Do you think there's any money to be made as a side hobby by buying and flipping gemstones at online auctions? Maybe buying rough specimens for a decent price and then getting them cut and stuff yourself to resell for a profit? I'm new to gemstones but it seems like it'd make a cool hobby to start collecting and getting into the gem market.
As a kid I collected any pretty rocks I found. When I was very young one of my mom's friends gave me a small semi-polished turquoise and that was the beginning of the end for me. 😋 I have so many crystals in my collection now. Spheres, towers, pyramids, skulls, animal carvings, tumbles, rough, hearts, and palm stones.
Gorgeous pieces. But you really should mention the dangers some of these minerals can pose. For example, stibnite contains antimony, which if ingested can cause symptoms similar to those from arsenic poisoning. You certainly don’t want to be grinding or cutting that stuff up and breathing it in.
i live in the same house from when i was younger and me and my friends still go next to my bedroom outside to get rocks, we hit the JACKPOT! we found obsidian, quarts, and more! its so fun
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. My first in my collection was optical Calcite, I was amazed when you placed it over ‘text’ and the double refraction caused the letters to double. Rocks that friends send me from rockhounding have a high personal value to me. Being from the U.K. my friend Regan from AZ sends me some beautiful specimens including Fire Agate, Geodes etc etc. Great video, thanks for sharing. 😀👍
@@rinakhan4202 - Myself and Regan have a mutual love of Geology. We didn’t ask each other, we just sent each other specimens from our respective countries. I send him specimens from Wales and he sends me specimens from Arizona & California. He has a UA-cam channel.
My crystal obsession began with a blood jasper I got gifted in the church when i was a child. Since then I always enjoyed to collect crystals and learn about them, now I've got a collection of hundreds of crystals
Awesome video sure glad to hear one doesn’t need expensive gems to have a collection fantastic knowledge beautiful collection you have thank you. Started with fossils , pink quartz , pyrite , and much more started at 8 years of age
Out of all the specimens in the video, I just absolutely love those calcite crystals from Rob’s collection, minerals with a story are always the best kind!
Quartz is absolutely not boring: Not only specimes with oriented inclusions are interesting, but amethyst, citrine, smokey quartz and - normally lab grown green quartz and blue quartz are highly fascinating too. And what is with opal, carneol, chalzedone, agate, jasper .... flint ... quartz is a core family of gemstones for me !
I can't remember my first piece. It was a long time ago but I will say that I hated fluorite when I started selling crystals. I know, crazy to think. I love it now.
Do you think there's any money to be made as a side hobby by selling and flipping gemstones at online auctions? Maybe buying rough specimens and getting them cut and stuff yourself to resell for a profit?
I found gemstones in my front and backyard a year ago. Then my son started to find some at his worksite! Gems are a very noted part in my jewelry collection! ❤️🦋
My gem collection actually started when my sister got me two Quartz specimens for Christmas. I've loved jewelry making for years and when I found this channel I fell in love with it!
Excellent channel! That calcite, it's not clean like mine refuse, it's fractured and scratched. It's not tumbled and worn down like eroded deposits from upstream of your location. My guess would be glacial deposits, broken and scratched from being pressed between up to two miles of ice and the surface soil and rock.
My grandparents lived in Western NC all my life every time we would go down we stopped at one or more of the buy a bucket gem mines. I now have around 4-5 hundred pounds of different stones from around the world.
My #1 tip for any new rock collector is always get what speaks to you and you see it and think “wow” because you think it looks so cool. Never just buy something just because or you think you need it to get started. No. You want to buy stones that you look at your collection and you are amazed and happy every time you see it. If you just go and buy a bunch of random stones, you’ll just see a bunch of rocks sitting there. Get the things that speak to you. For instance, I much prefer diamonds with a bunch of inclusions more than a clear diamond, though it is much cheaper that the clear, and Is sometimes even just discarded and used industrially.
Do you think there's any money to be made (as a side hobby) by buying and flipping gemstones at online auctions? I know you would need to know a lot about gems but I'm new to gemstones and it seems like it'd make a cool hobby to start collecting and get into the gem market.
I like rock hunting around my in laws' house. There aren't any crystal formations, but the rocks are SO fascinating. No idea what they are, wish I knew more or where to find more info. But there is quartz, again, not crystals, just opaque white hunks of quarts with interesting inclusions. I have one with a tiny bit of pyrite, it's really cool! My wedding ring is a rose quartz stone, so I'd like to turn one of the quartz rocks I found into a simple band for my husband. He has a wedding ring, but never wears it and I think it's because it's thick, so I want to make a thinner one that might be more comfortable.
My first crystal was a quartz cluster, which I got from JTV! I’ve been watching since the late 2000’s and loved the gemstone shows, especially late night when they showed and sold crystals in the rough.
Great video! As a seasoned collector, I suggest if you are starting a gemstone collection, decide how you wanna collect gems. I.e. I collect them by type and sub variety (like sapphires, yellow sapphires, pink sapphires etc.) Also don't get yourself overwhelmed so start with easy to acquire cheap gems like amethyst, citrine, peridot, blue topaz, tiger's eye, white quartz, etc. Lastly, stay within your budget- do not overdo it! Happy collecting!
I had always liked minerals, but it really started when I was given a tiny polished moss agate in elementary school. I had been doing a little geology course at the museum and they passed around a bucket with 100+ tiny agates and everyone got to take one home. Mine was a dark purplish grey with a green fern shaped inclusion. Eventually that interest turned into a fluorescent mineral collection :D
My very first crystal was a carnelian tumble stone from a school trip but I didn’t really start collecting properly till 4 years ago, now I’ve got hundreds of crystals but my all time favourite is my petroleum quartz that was given to me as a freebie and labelled citrine, I was so excited when I first saw it had moving bubbles in it, I could stare at it for hours.
I've been collecting gems and minerals my whole life. My mom tells me that, on stroller rides as a baby, I would point at rocks on the side of the road and she would have to pick them up for me. Then, as a kid, on a couple tours of caverns, I went panning for rocks (buying a bag of dirt with stones in it from the gift shop and rinsing the dirt away) and started my collection. My first year in college, my friend took me to a local crystal shop and I fell in love with gems once again. A couple years later, I discovered rock tumbling.
Ametrine, is ALL from Bolivia. It is NOT heat treated, nor irradiated. Look on UA-cam for Bolivian Ametrine, and you will see the stone comes right out of the mine with its characteristic bi-color. Synthetic Ametrine is all treated with heat and gamma radiation, but that is another animal.
My collection began on a family vacation to Colorado 42 yrs ago when i was 12. In one town we were told that we could find turquoise in the dirt alleys. I found about 10 pieces and thus began my collection. Those are my most valuable pieces as my collection began with something I found myself. I love how Rob keeps saying "collect what you like". Collections dont have to be fancy, expensive or "top of the line". They only need to be something you yourself enjoy.
I love anything rough. Almost everything I have is rough. 😅. Would love any of these pieces though! My first piece was a small garnet that had surfaced.
I’ve always like collecting gems,my first was an amethyst given to me by a kind male guest who stayed in my nans bed and breakfast house,he also gave me my first ever slice of pizza..at 15 years old x
got my first gemstone rough at a place you sift through buckets been hooked ever since i now have a lot of cut and uncut gemstones a lot i want to cut but dont have a cutter in my area
I have so many gems now, I started collecting when I was six and found a huge quartz specimen the size of my hand for 50¢ at a garage sale. Then I would get grab bags of tumbled and dyed stones, and some years ago I started collecting megalodon teeth, trilobites, amethyst, and I have at least a hundred rough opals, from both Ethiopia and Australia. I just added a cool polished quartz landscape, a hematite with rutile, and a epidote on quartz! Edit: i keep remembering more things I have haha, I have pyrite spheres, quartz, fluorite, ammonites both with and without ammolite, a coprolite, my mother in law gifted me some lovely rough and faceted gem samples when she went to the Smithsonian, herkimer diamonds, I didn’t realize just how many I have, there’s more I haven’t even mentioned lol
Hi . I live close to kashmir so I started my first gem collection with corundum sapphire and rubies. I am also collecting aquamarine and peridot. I never sold one but I buy from minners.
My more serious gem and mineral collection really started when I inherited my grandfather's old mineral collection, some lovely specimens to get me intrigued, since then, I've branched out and started collecting sapphires, gem opals and chrysoprase more than anything else as they are generally the best value specimens I can obtain locally. I have a soft spot for broken Hill minerals though, it would have to be my favourite mineral locality by far, with so many different minerals to be found there and some truely iconic associations like the gorgeous combinations with galena, spessartine and world class gemmy red rhodonite rhombohedra *personal favourite Broken Hill minerals are quite popular amongst collectors, however, due to the large volume of specimens that came out of the mines there one can still expect to find plenty of cabinet size specimens in the market for a decent price.
I first saw Fool's Gold at our local garden center & loved the sparkly glittery look. I think that was my first piece. Then I found a chunk of amethyst in a hippie type store & bought it as it's my zodiac crystal. My mum is into crystals for their protective and spiritual powers so I've been surrounded by them but mostly like them for their colours, shape and sparkle. I'm not a hoarder (I hate clutter) so don't collect them but I have a couple. I mostly look for unusual ones in Jewellery pieces. I love anything blue and green. 💚💙💜
I've been collecting 30 years now it started with seeing an amethyst geode slice in a gift shop after a cave tour in the smokey mountains and on and off since
This was honestly a great video for me I think I enjoy hearing your passion for more then the rest of the team there 😂, also the wiz black and yellow cut had me and my wife laughing so hard.
I started collecting quarts crystals when I was quite young. My parents were members of a camp resort in the woods, and an older gentleman taught me how to find quartz crystals. I could find the tiniest ones up to about the size of my thumb in the campgrounds. Then I started finding Apache Tears (obsidian) in the same area.
i guess i started off as being like many kids collecting cool rocks, then there was some gifted jewelry that i liked the materials of more than anything, and the find of some really underpriced quartz statues at a thrift shop lol seems sometimes collections just kinda happen, at least if you're not doing it too seriously ^^; these were cool, i especially liked the ancient flash powder XD
I try to collect with an eye to minerals from Canada. Add in some silver from Cobalt Ontario, such incredible history. Some copper. But I will pick up anything that catches my eye, and doesn't break the bank. It does not have to be big to be beautiful.
Awesome video! I'm still fairly new to the hobby and would love to hear jtv talk to us about gem and mineral societies. I want to join the local group, but wanting to wait until my youngest daughter starts kindergarten, so I'll have more free time. I'd appreciate a video I can watch a thousand times until next fall
He made way too many mistakes to be taken seriously. The biggest mistake was saying that Ametrine is Heat-Treated or Irradiated. That is a LIE. Ametrine that is mined in Bolivia(its only source) is 100% natural and untreated. The G.I.A makes that emphatically clear.
All those gemstones you shown in this video are very pretty both treated and raw.🙂💎 It's very helpful information that you yold us on how to collect gemstones for beginners.👨🏫📘 I think all of these gemstones are very pretty and unique looking especially the colors too.🌈💎 Thanks for sharing us and good video.😉👍💎
So my first few pieces of my current collection were a like 5 lb hunk of rose quartz that was chillin at my local rock shop this gorgeous amethyst cluster and a beautiful I think Amazonite? Pendulum
I started collecting crystals a few months ago and i have 16 of them now- i found one by myself, its a big quartz chunk that i found in a literal mud puddle (sounds disgusting but i actually feel like that quartz wanted me because i never saw it there and one day when i went crystal hunting i saw it shine in the mud puddle and i was excited to have my first big find ever)
It can be challenging without any basic gemological equipment (polarizer, refractometer, etc), but much can be accomplished with careful observation. In the case of Fluorite vs. Quartz, look at the terminations, assuming it's a rough crystal. Fluorite should have a flatter, more symmetrical shape owing to its cubic crystal system, while quartz is trigonal and usually forms in rhombehedrons, with a six-sided cross section. Even a fragmented crystal may show sharper terminations. Also, look for tell-tale signs...The Fluorite may have cleavage planes, inside or out. These are flat breakages, with terrace-like markings. Quartz may have horizontal striations running along its C-axis. Faceted stones can be more challenging. Also, keep in mind, Fluorite typically has a slightly duller luster than Quartz.
My grandpa used to take me rock hunting. He was very much into all things gem/mineral related. He got into cutting cabs and making bevel settings. He liked display pieces and things with stories behind them. My grandparents moved just south of Tucson, and yearly he was in heaven getting to go to the gem and mineral show every year. He'd help me identify rocks I found in river beds and share all this knowledge with me. He got me into gem collecting, and rock hunting. He'd crack thundereggs with me and send me jewelry he had made me. When he passed away he left me all his equipment and his rocks. I'd rather still have him, but he lives on in stories when I get to tell people where the 2 lbs malachite on the mantle came from or the time I was with him and found my favorite aventurine stone at a flea market, or even when he showed me how using my spit could make a random piece of Jasper I found on the ground look so brilliantly red. I loved being his little pebble pup.
I’ve been collecting gemstones for the past 17 years. The colors, sizes, and shapes are so eye-catching. I’ve never seen a bicolor Afghan topaz, but I have two very large bicolor topazes from Ukraine.
Those bi-color Ukraine topazes are beautiful, but keep them out of the sun, or they will fade.
Sariafan93. Do you think there's any money to be made as a side hobby by buying and flipping gemstones at online auctions? Maybe buying rough specimens for a decent price and then getting them cut and stuff yourself to resell for a profit? I'm new to gemstones but it seems like it'd make a cool hobby to start collecting and getting into the gem market.
As a kid I collected any pretty rocks I found. When I was very young one of my mom's friends gave me a small semi-polished turquoise and that was the beginning of the end for me. 😋 I have so many crystals in my collection now. Spheres, towers, pyramids, skulls, animal carvings, tumbles, rough, hearts, and palm stones.
Gorgeous pieces. But you really should mention the dangers some of these minerals can pose. For example, stibnite contains antimony, which if ingested can cause symptoms similar to those from arsenic poisoning. You certainly don’t want to be grinding or cutting that stuff up and breathing it in.
That pyramid is getting NO airtime at all!
What about the rainbow pyramid? :(
i live in the same house from when i was younger and me and my friends still go next to my bedroom outside to get rocks, we hit the JACKPOT! we found obsidian, quarts, and more! its so fun
I found green stone while digging some soil at my garden when i was 16 from there my journey of collecting rocks started
"Follow your heart....WHAT?!"
That was hilarious!! You're my favorite! 💎💎🧡💚💛💎💎
“Follow your passion, follow your heart- what” lol that moment when you hear yourself 😅 Great video! Entertaining delivery 👌🏼
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. My first in my collection was optical Calcite, I was amazed when you placed it over ‘text’ and the double refraction caused the letters to double. Rocks that friends send me from rockhounding have a high personal value to me. Being from the U.K. my friend Regan from AZ sends me some beautiful specimens including Fire Agate, Geodes etc etc. Great video, thanks for sharing. 😀👍
Wah. You are very lucky. My friends don't sent me free crystals eventhough they know I love them very much.
@@rinakhan4202 - Myself and Regan have a mutual love of Geology. We didn’t ask each other, we just sent each other specimens from our respective countries. I send him specimens from Wales and he sends me specimens from Arizona & California. He has a UA-cam channel.
My crystal obsession began with a blood jasper I got gifted in the church when i was a child. Since then I always enjoyed to collect crystals and learn about them, now I've got a collection of hundreds of crystals
Awesome video sure glad to hear one doesn’t need expensive gems to have a collection fantastic knowledge beautiful collection you have thank you. Started with fossils , pink quartz , pyrite , and much more started at 8 years of age
Absolutely, it doesn’t need to be expensive to be beautiful.
Out of all the specimens in the video, I just absolutely love those calcite crystals from Rob’s collection, minerals with a story are always the best kind!
Quartz is absolutely not boring: Not only specimes with oriented inclusions are interesting, but amethyst, citrine, smokey quartz and - normally lab grown green quartz and blue quartz are highly fascinating too. And what is with opal, carneol, chalzedone, agate, jasper .... flint ... quartz is a core family of gemstones for me !
Wait, what was the Pride pyramid at the end haha?
I can't remember my first piece. It was a long time ago but I will say that I hated fluorite when I started selling crystals. I know, crazy to think. I love it now.
Do you think there's any money to be made as a side hobby by selling and flipping gemstones at online auctions? Maybe buying rough specimens and getting them cut and stuff yourself to resell for a profit?
I have a nice collection of strawberry quartz, several shapes of rutilated and tourmalated quartz
I found gemstones in my front and backyard a year ago. Then my son started to find some at his worksite! Gems are a very noted part in my jewelry collection! ❤️🦋
My gem collection actually started when my sister got me two Quartz specimens for Christmas. I've loved jewelry making for years and when I found this channel I fell in love with it!
I love this! I don't have a lot of gemstones, but I love them all
Excellent channel! That calcite, it's not clean like mine refuse, it's fractured and scratched. It's not tumbled and worn down like eroded deposits from upstream of your location. My guess would be glacial deposits, broken and scratched from being pressed between up to two miles of ice and the surface soil and rock.
Best presenter on channel. I’m also grateful for this intro
My grandparents lived in Western NC all my life every time we would go down we stopped at one or more of the buy a bucket gem mines. I now have around 4-5 hundred pounds of different stones from around the world.
You never really talked about the pyramid in your collection. What is it?
My #1 tip for any new rock collector is always get what speaks to you and you see it and think “wow” because you think it looks so cool. Never just buy something just because or you think you need it to get started. No. You want to buy stones that you look at your collection and you are amazed and happy every time you see it. If you just go and buy a bunch of random stones, you’ll just see a bunch of rocks sitting there. Get the things that speak to you. For instance, I much prefer diamonds with a bunch of inclusions more than a clear diamond, though it is much cheaper that the clear, and Is sometimes even just discarded and used industrially.
Do you think there's any money to be made (as a side hobby) by buying and flipping gemstones at online auctions? I know you would need to know a lot about gems but I'm new to gemstones and it seems like it'd make a cool hobby to start collecting and get into the gem market.
I’ve learned so much from this channel!
Man, I just couldn't leave the store without getting a deep purple rough star sapphire once... it is gorgeous.
Asterism in corundum is just awesome
@@-.Tristan.- Corundum can also Color Change and display Chatoyancy
@@KrosanBeast315 Yep, why its one of the coolest gemstones!
My grandma gave me a beautiful blue star sapphire it's my favorite piece
I like rock hunting around my in laws' house. There aren't any crystal formations, but the rocks are SO fascinating. No idea what they are, wish I knew more or where to find more info. But there is quartz, again, not crystals, just opaque white hunks of quarts with interesting inclusions. I have one with a tiny bit of pyrite, it's really cool!
My wedding ring is a rose quartz stone, so I'd like to turn one of the quartz rocks I found into a simple band for my husband. He has a wedding ring, but never wears it and I think it's because it's thick, so I want to make a thinner one that might be more comfortable.
My first crystal was a quartz cluster, which I got from JTV! I’ve been watching since the late 2000’s and loved the gemstone shows, especially late night when they showed and sold crystals in the rough.
Great video! As a seasoned collector, I suggest if you are starting a gemstone collection, decide how you wanna collect gems. I.e. I collect them by type and sub variety (like sapphires, yellow sapphires, pink sapphires etc.) Also don't get yourself overwhelmed so start with easy to acquire cheap gems like amethyst, citrine, peridot, blue topaz, tiger's eye, white quartz, etc. Lastly, stay within your budget- do not overdo it! Happy collecting!
I had always liked minerals, but it really started when I was given a tiny polished moss agate in elementary school. I had been doing a little geology course at the museum and they passed around a bucket with 100+ tiny agates and everyone got to take one home. Mine was a dark purplish grey with a green fern shaped inclusion. Eventually that interest turned into a fluorescent mineral collection :D
My very first crystal was a carnelian tumble stone from a school trip but I didn’t really start collecting properly till 4 years ago, now I’ve got hundreds of crystals but my all time favourite is my petroleum quartz that was given to me as a freebie and labelled citrine, I was so excited when I first saw it had moving bubbles in it, I could stare at it for hours.
I've been collecting gems and minerals my whole life. My mom tells me that, on stroller rides as a baby, I would point at rocks on the side of the road and she would have to pick them up for me. Then, as a kid, on a couple tours of caverns, I went panning for rocks (buying a bag of dirt with stones in it from the gift shop and rinsing the dirt away) and started my collection. My first year in college, my friend took me to a local crystal shop and I fell in love with gems once again. A couple years later, I discovered rock tumbling.
Not all ametrine is heat treated/radiated. I would only buy the natural ametrine.
Whaaaat??? I would love to find calcite like that!! 😍✨
Seriously!! I find calcite rhombs in my area within nodules, but nothing with that crazy of a crystal structure.
Ametrine, is ALL from Bolivia. It is NOT heat treated, nor irradiated. Look on UA-cam for Bolivian Ametrine, and you will see the stone comes right out of the mine with its characteristic bi-color. Synthetic Ametrine is all treated with heat and gamma radiation, but that is another animal.
My collection began on a family vacation to Colorado 42 yrs ago when i was 12. In one town we were told that we could find turquoise in the dirt alleys. I found about 10 pieces and thus began my collection. Those are my most valuable pieces as my collection began with something I found myself.
I love how Rob keeps saying "collect what you like". Collections dont have to be fancy, expensive or "top of the line". They only need to be something you yourself enjoy.
I love fluorite one of the first crystal I had started my collection with
Fluorite is one of my top 3 favorite gems, topaz and agate take the other spots
I love anything rough. Almost everything I have is rough. 😅. Would love any of these pieces though! My first piece was a small garnet that had surfaced.
I’ve always like collecting gems,my first was an amethyst given to me by a kind male guest who stayed in my nans bed and breakfast house,he also gave me my first ever slice of pizza..at 15 years old x
Beautiful crystals! I love collecting crystals and I specialize in collecting Garden Quartz :)
Yes! i’ve finally gotten some phantom garden quartz i’m so hyped
got my first gemstone rough at a place you sift through buckets been hooked ever since i now have a lot of cut and uncut gemstones a lot i want to cut but dont have a cutter in my area
I have so many gems now, I started collecting when I was six and found a huge quartz specimen the size of my hand for 50¢ at a garage sale. Then I would get grab bags of tumbled and dyed stones, and some years ago I started collecting megalodon teeth, trilobites, amethyst, and I have at least a hundred rough opals, from both Ethiopia and Australia. I just added a cool polished quartz landscape, a hematite with rutile, and a epidote on quartz!
Edit: i keep remembering more things I have haha, I have pyrite spheres, quartz, fluorite, ammonites both with and without ammolite, a coprolite, my mother in law gifted me some lovely rough and faceted gem samples when she went to the Smithsonian, herkimer diamonds, I didn’t realize just how many I have, there’s more I haven’t even mentioned lol
I wonder what stones were in the pyramid he had
Hi . I live close to kashmir so I started my first gem collection with corundum sapphire and rubies. I am also collecting aquamarine and peridot. I never sold one but I buy from minners.
My more serious gem and mineral collection really started when I inherited my grandfather's old mineral collection, some lovely specimens to get me intrigued, since then, I've branched out and started collecting sapphires, gem opals and chrysoprase more than anything else as they are generally the best value specimens I can obtain locally.
I have a soft spot for broken Hill minerals though, it would have to be my favourite mineral locality by far, with so many different minerals to be found there and some truely iconic associations like the gorgeous combinations with galena, spessartine and world class gemmy red rhodonite rhombohedra *personal favourite
Broken Hill minerals are quite popular amongst collectors, however, due to the large volume of specimens that came out of the mines there one can still expect to find plenty of cabinet size specimens in the market for a decent price.
Beautiful minerals 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I first saw Fool's Gold at our local garden center & loved the sparkly glittery look. I think that was my first piece. Then I found a chunk of amethyst in a hippie type store & bought it as it's my zodiac crystal. My mum is into crystals for their protective and spiritual powers so I've been surrounded by them but mostly like them for their colours, shape and sparkle. I'm not a hoarder (I hate clutter) so don't collect them but I have a couple. I mostly look for unusual ones in Jewellery pieces. I love anything blue and green. 💚💙💜
I understand time limits, but when Rob-or any of the folks- get talking, it is so fun. And I'm learning. Edits make me wonder what I'm missing. :)
I've been collecting 30 years now it started with seeing an amethyst geode slice in a gift shop after a cave tour in the smokey mountains and on and off since
This was honestly a great video for me I think I enjoy hearing your passion for more then the rest of the team there 😂, also the wiz black and yellow cut had me and my wife laughing so hard.
I started collecting quarts crystals when I was quite young. My parents were members of a camp resort in the woods, and an older gentleman taught me how to find quartz crystals. I could find the tiniest ones up to about the size of my thumb in the campgrounds. Then I started finding Apache Tears (obsidian) in the same area.
i guess i started off as being like many kids collecting cool rocks, then there was some gifted jewelry that i liked the materials of more than anything, and the find of some really underpriced quartz statues at a thrift shop lol seems sometimes collections just kinda happen, at least if you're not doing it too seriously ^^; these were cool, i especially liked the ancient flash powder XD
I try to collect with an eye to minerals from Canada. Add in some silver from Cobalt Ontario, such incredible history. Some copper. But I will pick up anything that catches my eye, and doesn't break the bank. It does not have to be big to be beautiful.
I recently bought a tourmalinated quartz ring. It's so unique.
Awesome video! I'm still fairly new to the hobby and would love to hear jtv talk to us about gem and mineral societies. I want to join the local group, but wanting to wait until my youngest daughter starts kindergarten, so I'll have more free time. I'd appreciate a video I can watch a thousand times until next fall
He made way too many mistakes to be taken seriously. The biggest mistake was saying that Ametrine is Heat-Treated or Irradiated. That is a LIE. Ametrine that is mined in Bolivia(its only source) is 100% natural and untreated. The G.I.A makes that emphatically clear.
Is the pyramid an Orgonite?
All those gemstones you shown in this video are very pretty both treated and raw.🙂💎 It's very helpful information that you yold us on how to collect gemstones for beginners.👨🏫📘 I think all of these gemstones are very pretty and unique looking especially the colors too.🌈💎 Thanks for sharing us and good video.😉👍💎
So my first few pieces of my current collection were a like 5 lb hunk of rose quartz that was chillin at my local rock shop this gorgeous amethyst cluster and a beautiful I think Amazonite? Pendulum
I started collecting crystals a few months ago and i have 16 of them now- i found one by myself, its a big quartz chunk that i found in a literal mud puddle (sounds disgusting but i actually feel like that quartz wanted me because i never saw it there and one day when i went crystal hunting i saw it shine in the mud puddle and i was excited to have my first big find ever)
My favorite form of quartz is Double Terminated Black Phantom in Clear. They are so striking. Almost spooky even. I have a small one I got off ebay.
I love raw crystals. Great video, easy to watch 👍👌🤙
I have gem stone rare , very the color is green, blue, gold,black I don't know what the name is.
For me, my favorite Quartz has Hubnerite growing on it.
Yup collecting is no limit 😀😀
my rock collection is a *lot* of polished and a few raw im super into. my favorite is my sphere of mexican crazy lace agate!!
I love collecting rocks and metals. I love how we all geek out over cool looking minerals, almost like monkeys with shiny things 😂
I've found my people !
Not all ametrine is treated... Anahi Bolivia
Ametrine is never treated
I wonder if you can use mirac acid on some stones I did a muriatic acid test on one of my stones and basically ate it up
They didn't like that pyramid huh?
Collect what ever you like 👍
I like that 👌
Laughed out loud at "dark and yellow"
How does a layperson differentiate stones from say an estate sale? Especially flourite and quartz’s?
It can be challenging without any basic gemological equipment (polarizer, refractometer, etc), but much can be accomplished with careful observation. In the case of Fluorite vs. Quartz, look at the terminations, assuming it's a rough crystal. Fluorite should have a flatter, more symmetrical shape owing to its cubic crystal system, while quartz is trigonal and usually forms in rhombehedrons, with a six-sided cross section. Even a fragmented crystal may show sharper terminations. Also, look for tell-tale signs...The Fluorite may have cleavage planes, inside or out. These are flat breakages, with terrace-like markings. Quartz may have horizontal striations running along its C-axis. Faceted stones can be more challenging. Also, keep in mind, Fluorite typically has a slightly duller luster than Quartz.
@@gems Fluorite is flatter? Quartz in RHOMBOHEDRONS? What on earth are you talking about?
Love your videos ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ huge fan I want to become a gemologist just like you guys
Rutillated quartz top 👍👍👍
ROCK👏PEOPLE👏
What is the pyramidal all about?
Ametrine is a natural stone though, isn't it? From Bolivia.
Your editor ❤😂❤
Ooooh what about the orgonite pyramid 😊 ❤
Beautiful
beautiful ❤
Netural rock crystal colors less certificate kya hota hey ji
looks like someone cut out any talk of your orgonite pyramid lol
Thankfully. No need for that silliness.
Cost of rubby zosite
2:03 Most beginning Collectors can't afford a Bi-Colored Topaz.
The whole time during the last one i was thinking...What about the pyramid?? 😹
I love the ugly stuff, limonite after pyrite is my favorite, not interested in heat treatment
I have 2 kg Ruby zosite
Pls check my pist video! I cant identify what kind of gems stone i have
Eu tenho um petróleo diamante
I want that hood lol
can I have one?
Hi
I’m called Ruby , so gimme a second to polish up myself
❤