-40%

1.54 ct Natural Round-cut Bright Golden-Yellow VVS/VS Heliodor (Brazil)

$ 475.2

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: Golden beryl is sometimes referred to as 'heliodor', but many argue that heliodor and golden beryl are not the same gem. Heliodor is typically used to describe lighter, weaker colored greenish yellow beryl, while 'golden beryl' is reserved for vivid and intense lemon-lime like specimens. However, since there is no official distinction, heliodor and golden beryl are usually considered to be one and the same." ... "The greenish-yellow colored variety is referred to as heliodor or golden beryl. Golden beryl is the most common gem-quality variety of beryl. Colors range from vivid lemon-lime to pale greenish-yellow to golden in color. Golden beryl, or heliodor, owes its color to iron impurities. Beryl can also display ranging levels of pleochroism." ... "Golden beryl is almost always untreated.
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Depth: 5.63mm
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Gemstone: Beryl
  • Lot: No
  • Transparency: VS
  • Variety/Type: Yellow/Golden (Heliodor)
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Length: 7.32mm
  • Total Carat Weight (TCW): 1.54 ct
  • Natural/Lab-Created: Natural
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Brazil
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Country of Origin: Brazil
  • Color: Bright Golden-Yellow
  • Width: 7.32mm
  • Treatment: Not Heated
  • Shape: Round

    Description

    1.54 ct Natural Round-cut Bright Golden-Yellow VVS/VS Heliodor (Brazil)
    New without Tags.  This gem has never been used/placed/set in a setting.
    It is utterly undamaged, unmarred and in perfect condition as expected of NWOTags.
    I have included both a Beryl article and a Heliodor article below for your appreciation and enjoyment.
    Summary of below:
    "Golden beryl
    is sometimes referred to as 'heliodor'
    , but many argue that heliodor and golden beryl are not the same gem. Heliodor is typically used to describe lighter, weaker colored greenish yellow beryl, while 'golden beryl' is reserved for vivid and intense lemon-lime like specimens. However, since there is no official distinction, heliodor and golden beryl are usually considered to be one and the same.
    "   ...   "
    The greenish-yellow colored variety is referred to as heliodor or golden beryl. Golden beryl is the most common gem-quality variety of beryl. Colors range from vivid lemon-lime to pale greenish-yellow to golden in color. Golden beryl, or heliodor, owes its color to iron impurities. Beryl can also display ranging levels of
    pleochroism
    ."   ...   "
    Golden beryl is almost always untreated."
    Type:  Natural Beryl (Heliodor)
    (personally confirmed as Genuine Natural Heliodor by digital refractometer (RI=1.570), dichroscope (dichroic), polariscope (four flashes in rotation; not glass), spectroscope, UV short&long-wave light, measured Specific Gravity=2.69) -- captej2012
    Shape:  Round-cut
    Weight:  1.54 ct
    Size:  7.32mm x 7.32mm x 5.63mm
    Color:  Golden Yellow
    Clarity:  VVS/VS
    Origin:  Brazil
    Treatment:  Not Heated, Not Enhanced, Not Treated
    The Kids were Young when W
    e called the Sun
    Big-Bright
    .
    When Such are the Sentiments to be
    Stored in a Stone,
    What Better than the Sparkling Magic of a
    Heliodor
    ?
    I brought
    Big-Bright
    home to Contain the Moments.
    Moments when Family was their Only World.
    When Innocence, a Chance for Wonder.
    When Laughter, a Note of Joy.
    When Song, a Lack of Fear.
    Big-Bright
    saw My Love drive me in Everything
    .
    I Worked and Gave My All for Family.
    Still could I have Done Better and Provided More?
    Big-Bright
    says
    "Nay, One's Best is All Any Can Do."
    We are an eBay eStore enterprise focused on selling mostly Loose Natural Gemstones.  Stay here, look around and learn.  Via eBay Messaging, ask us questions, make an offer, and otherwise discuss your wishes, concerns and hopes.  We pride ourselves as good-spirited folks having fun and doing our best to share the joy of Nature's most beautiful and enduring literal treasure -- Natural Gemstones.  Expect to find us cheerful and trustworthy, and we will expect the same of you.  For us, Negative FeedBack as a means of coercion is never needed and only degrades everyone's enjoyment in what should otherwise be a fun shopping experience.          And finally, please enjoy my work as eBay's First (unofficial) Gemstone Poet.  --  captej2012
    ====================================================================================
    Beryl Gemstone Information
    About Beryl - History and Introduction
    Beryl is one of the most important mineral groups. It is abundant, but rarely occurs in transparent gem-quality material. Transparent specimens are referred to as 'precious beryl'. The most famous member of the beryl family is green emerald, followed secondly by blue aquamarine. Even though beryl is one of the most important mineral groups, golden beryl is not very well-known by the general public. Other popular beryls include pink 'morganite' and white, or colorless, 'goshenite'. Red beryl is the rarest variety of beryl and it is known in the trade as 'bixbite'.
    Golden beryl is sometimes referred to as 'heliodor', but many argue that heliodor and golden beryl are not the same gem. Heliodor is typically used to describe lighter, weaker colored greenish yellow beryl, while 'golden beryl' is reserved for vivid and intense lemon-lime like specimens. However, since there is no official distinction, heliodor and golden beryl are usually considered to be one and the same. Nowadays, the trade name of heliodor is rarely used.
    Beryl in its purest form is completely colorless (goshenite). Trace impurities and coloring agents within colorless beryl are responsible for the many different colored varieties of beryl. Golden beryl's color is owed to iron impurities. Without trace elements and impurities, beryl would be rather ordinary and average, except for its superior hardness.
    World-Famous Beryl
    In 1913, the first significant deposit of golden beryl was discovered in Namibia by a German mining company. The material discovered was named 'heliodor', a word derived from the Greek language meaning 'gift from the sun'. Lucas von Cranach, one of the era's most prestigious jewelry designers, was asked to create an exquisite jewelry set for the then current German Emperor and King of Prussia, Kaiser Wilhem II. It was because of this fantastic exposure that golden beryl earned its fame as a precious gem. However, soon after the war, heliodor was almost completely forgotten about. One of the world's largest cut beryl stones is a 2,054 carat flawless, golden colored beryl. The exquisite gem is currently on display in Washington D.C.'s, "Hall of Gems", located within the Smithsonian Institution.
    Beryl
    Identifying Beryl
    There are a number of different gems that bear similar resemblance to golden beryl, including apatite, quartz, feldspar, topaz and tourmaline. However, beryl can usually be easily identified and distinguished from similar gems through basic testing. One of the easiest methods to identify beryl is by testing specific gravity ( density ) and hardness. Beryl is significantly harder than apatite, quartz and feldspar, but slightly softer than topaz.
    Beryl, topaz and tourmaline also have very different crystal systems and formations. Tourmaline's crystal structure is usually heavily striated; topaz has perfect cleavage and eight-sided striations, whereas beryl has a distinct six-sided hexagonal crystal structure which makes it very easily identifiable.
    Beryl Origin and Gemstone Sources
    Beryl specimens from Brazil are known to be of the highest quality. Brazilian beryl typically exhibits excellent clarity and specimens from Brazil tend to be much larger than other sources. Other significant mining locations include Madagascar, Namibia, Sri Lanka (Ceylon), Nigeria and Zimbabwe. Aquamarine, the birthstone for March, is also sourced mainly from Brazil and Karur, India.
    Buying Beryl and Determining Beryl Gemstone Value
    Beryl Color
    Precious beryl occurs in a variety of colors. The greenish-yellow colored variety is referred to as heliodor or golden beryl. Golden beryl is the most common gem-quality variety of beryl. Colors range from vivid lemon-lime to pale greenish-yellow to golden in color. Golden beryl, or heliodor, owes its color to iron impurities. Beryl can also display ranging levels of pleochroism.
    Beryl Clarity and Luster
    Beryl can naturally occur in a range of clarity levels from transparent to opaque. Gemstone-quality beryl is transparent. Inclusions are rare for golden beryl and specimens are almost always eye-clean. When cut and polished, golden beryl has an attractive vitreous to waxy luster.
    Beryl Cut and Shape
    Golden beryl is usually faceted to display its brilliance. It is not typically cut en cabochon, unless it possesses asterism (star effect) or chatoyancy (cat's eye effect). Golden beryl is available in a variety of shapes and cutting styles, including Portuguese cuts and checkerboard cuts. Traditional shapes are most common, including ovals, pears, rounds and cushions, and fancy shapes are also readily available, such as trillions, hearts, briolettes and flower cuts. Beryl is an excellent material used frequently for gemstone carvings and ornamental designs.
    Beryl Treatment
    Golden beryl is almost always untreated. Pink and white, colorless beryl is not typically treated. Some  aquamarine stones may be enhanced with light heat treatment, while emerald is almost always treated with oil resin.
    ====================================================================================
    Heliodor or Golden Beryl
    Beryl from Madagascar
    Most gem buyers are well acquainted with the most famous members of the  beryl family -- emerald and aquamarine. Some are also familiar with the salmon pink beryl known as morganite (after the American banker and gem collector, J.P Morgan). But there is a lesser known member of the beryl family which is actually the most available and affordable: golden beryl.
    The first major deposit of the yellow golden beryl was found in Namibia in 1913 by a German mining company. They named it
    heliodor
    from the Greek for "gift from the sun," and hired a famous designer, Lucas von Cranach, to create a fabulous set of jewelry for Kaiser Wilhem II of Germany and his wife. Heliodor gained international fame as a result, but it proved to be shortlived as the war intervened. Heliodor was soon forgotten.
    Additional deposits of golden beryl have been discovered in Brazil and Madagascar and these gems are now widely available. They tend to have excellent clarity and can often be found in larger sizes. The use of the term "heliodor" seems to have declined somewhat, and there is in fact some disagreement over the uses of the terms "heliodor" and "golden beryl."
    According to one well-known gemological reference (Walter Schumann,
    Gemstones of the World
    ), the term heliodor refers to the light yellow-green color of beryl. However, Schumann goes on to note that "since there is no clear distinction possible in the yellow and green-yellow tones in comparison to golden beryl, heliodors are generally rejected as an independent precious beryl variety and rather are counted among the weak-colored golden beryls."
    Heliodor Golden Beryl Rough
    Golden beryl has a hardness of 7.5 to 8 on the Mohs scale, so it is suitable for all kinds of jewelry. Golden beryl colors range from the weak yellow-green of heliodor to lemon-yellow and golden-yellow. The coloring agent is iron.
    Golden beryl deposits have been found in Brazil, Madagascar, Namibia, Nigeria, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. Probably the largest cut golden beryl in the world is the flawless 2,054 carat stone on display in the Hall of Gems in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.