10kt 3.97ctw Emerald Eternity Band Item: AGM495E
In Stock JTV Price: $99.99Price: $59.99 You Save: 40%
Estimated shipping: $4.99*
Product Description for 10kt 3.97ctw Emerald Eternity Band10kt yellow gold, 3.97ctw round emerald eternity band. the emeralds are approximately 3mm. this band is 1/8 inch knuckle to knuckle and is not sizeable. the stone count will vary according to size.
Product Information for 10kt 3.97ctw Emerald Eternity Band
| Product Type: | Ring | Material Type: | Gold |
| Style: | Eternity Band | Material Color: | Yellow |
| Width: | 1/8 Inch | Material Purity: | 10Kt |
| Gram Weight: | 2.10g - 2.40g |
Primary Stone / Emerald
| Shape: | Round | Count: | 19.00 |
| Cut: | Mixed Cuts | Composition: | Natural |
| Color: | Green | Treatment: | Standard Treatment |
| Dimensions: | 3.2 MM - Not Calibrated | Gemstone Group: | Beryl |
| Customer Rating |
|
3.3
out of 5
|
|
|
4 of 8 (50%) customers would recommend this product to a friend. |
|
|
| : |
|
2
out of 5
|
not what I thought,
January 4, 2008
ZAZA
, N, O LA
| Quality: |
|
2
out of 5
|
| Value: |
|
2
out of 5
|
|
"fair quality and very uncomfortable to wear,the color is soso Iam very disapointed. Iam sendeng it back"
|
|
Product met expectations:
No
Purchased as a gift:
No
|
|
| : |
|
5
out of 5
|
stack ring for me,
November 27, 2007
maryellyn
| Quality: |
|
5
out of 5
|
| Value: |
|
5
out of 5
|
|
"I love to stack band rings. This is my sons birthstone and I wear it between two diamond eternity bands and LOVE IT. Its a keeper. Thanks JTV."
|
|
|
|
| : |
|
1
out of 5
|
Bleh,
August 24, 2007
kalel
, Atlanta, GA
| Quality: |
|
1
out of 5
|
| Value: |
|
1
out of 5
|
|
"There are great deals at JTV and this is NOT one of them. I bought this as a gift for a friend and immediately sent it back. The fit is terrible for an eternity band, the gems are a milky green color, almost the same color as jade, and several of them were cracked/flawed. What's the point of getting 4 carats of awful emeralds?"
|
|
Product met expectations:
No
Purchased as a gift:
No
|
|
| : |
|
4
out of 5
|
Love it!,
August 13, 2007
Shonda
, missouri
| Quality: |
|
4
out of 5
|
| Value: |
|
4
out of 5
|
|
"Bought this awhile back....looks great and feels great on my finger! Love JTV!"
|
|
Product met expectations:
Yes
Purchased as a gift:
No
|
|
|
home learning library emerald
|
|
Fast Facts
| The most precious member of the Beryl family; emerald exhibits a distinct and recognizable pure green hue. |
| This glorious stone was traded in one of the earliest known gem markets in Babylon around 4000 B.C. |
| According to legend, the Emperor Nero watched the gladiator fights through an emerald. |
| The world’s finest emeralds are found in the Andes of Colombia. Despite a 300-year search, no other deposit has rivaled the glory of the Colombian deposits. |
Emeralds are created with interesting and distinct identifiable “jardin” inclusions, which are particular to that beryl and are one of the most immediate ways of recognizing a genuine natural emerald.
|
|
Emerald is the most precious member of the Beryl family. It exhibits a distinct and recognizable pure green hue but can also be found in a bluish-green hue. On Mohs’ scale of hardness, emerald is 7.5-8. It has a vitreous luster and sources include Colombia, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Russia (Urals), Afghanistan, Australia (New South Wales, Western Australia), Ghana, India, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Zambia, Tanzania, and the United States (North Carolina).
The beauty of Colombian emeralds, known for their extraordinary color and crystallization, is unique since their formation process occurred in a different geological environment than all the other known emerald deposits. They are found in black argillaceous limestone of the Upper Cretaceous age, which was deposited in a sea separating North and South America.
During the Continental drift, the Andes Mountains were formed, and beds that were originally at the bottom of the sea found themselves at the top of the mountains. While folding, the rocks fractured, which provided space for the growth of calcite veins. Hot magma followed by hot gases and fluids permeated through the cracks, bringing with them the elements necessary to crystallize emeralds. These gases were trapped in the crust of the fold in the eastern cordillera of the Andes by an impermeable shale formation. Since calcite veins are porous and permeable, the emeralds had an opportunity to crystallize while the gasses and fluids cooled off.
Color
Emerald exhibits an incomparable pure green hue but can also be found in a bluish-green hue.
Treatments and Enhancements
All emerald crystals go through the same six-part enhancement process to become the gemstones we are familiar with. These steps are sawing, performing, cutting, polishing, cleaning, and clarity enhancing. Virtually all emeralds require the process of clarity enhancement. This process involves immersing the emerald into a colorless medium. An infinitesimal amount of the clarity-enhancing medium penetrates the open fissures in the emerald. This volume is so small that it is usually not measurable by weight (as little as 1/100,000 of a gram).
It should be assumed that every emerald has been processed in this manner unless it has an accompanying laboratory report indicating that there is no evidence of a clarity-enhancement medium. Such extraordinarily rare stones command a considerable premium.
|

|
 The safer, easier way to pay.
|