14kt .50ctw Alexandrite And .27ctw Diamond Ring Item: FRC101
 JTV Price: $499.99Price: $399.99 You Save: 20%
Product Description for 14kt .50ctw Alexandrite And .27ctw Diamond Ring14kt yellow gold .50ctw oval alexandrite from the Orissa mines and .27ctw round diamond ring. This ring measures 1/4 inch from knuckle to knuckle.
Product Information for 14kt .50ctw Alexandrite And .27ctw Diamond Ring
| Product Type: | Ring | Material Type: | Gold |
| Style: | 3-Stone | Material Color: | Yellow |
| Width: | 1/32 Inch | Material Purity: | 14Kt |
Primary Stone / Alexandrite
| Shape: | Oval | Composition: | Natural |
| Cut: | Brilliant | Treatment: | Untreated |
| Color: | Blue | Gemstone Group: | Chrysoberyl |
| Dimensions: | 5X4 MM - Not Calibrated | Setting: | 4-Prong |
Secondary Stone / Diamond
| Shape: | Round |
| Carat Weight: | 0.27 |
| Color: | White |
| Count: | 42.00 |
| Setting: | 4-Prong |
| Customer Rating |
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5
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3 of 3 (100%) customers would recommend this product to a friend. |
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5
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Love it!,
May 31, 2008
aneagle
, Elgin, IL
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4
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5
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"This Alexandrite ring has great color change and the stones are clean the diamonds surrounding each stone are clean but are very very tiny. The color changes dramatic from a deep green to purple. I 'm very pleased and love wearing the ring."
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Product met expectations:
Yes
Purchased as a gift:
No
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5
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One of my favorites,
March 16, 2008
LaurenM
, Chicago. IL
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5
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5
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"This is an awesome ring. It's my birthstone and had to have it. Absolutely beautiful."
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Product met expectations:
Yes
Purchased as a gift:
No
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1 of 1 people found this review helpful.
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home learning library alexandrite
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Fast Facts
| A member of the Chrysoberyl family, alexandrite holds a prized and highly priced position among jewelry and gem collectors. |
| A color change stone, alexandrite can appear green in daylight and change to a raspberry color in incandescent light, but other color changes are also highly prized. |
| Alexandrite was discovered in 1830 in the Ural Mountains on the day Czar Alexander II came of age, and thus the stones were named in his honor. |
The primary sources for alexandrite are Sri Lanka, Brazil, Burma (Myanmar), Madagascar and Russia.
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Alexandrite is a highly prized variety of chrysoberyl. Alexandrite only forms when aluminum/beryllium and chrome (which rarely occurs in nature) come together, accounting for its rarity. On Mohs’ scale of hardness, alexandrite is 8.5. It has a strong vitreous luster and primary sources include Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, and Brazil (Minas Gerais).
Color
Alexandrite is typically found in blue, blue-green, and brownish-green shades. However, this phenomenal gem is known as "emerald by day, ruby by night" because of its ability to change color, depending on the type of light in which it's viewed. In the daylight and fluorescent light, alexandrite appears in shades of blue and green, but in tungsten (incandescent) light, it appears in shades of red. Other alexandrite color changes are possible (from blue to purple, from greenish blue to reddish blue, from brownish-green to brownish-red, etc.) and also highly prized.

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