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Gemstone Guide
Spessartite
Spessartite is a type of garnet. Colour is orange to red-orange
Kyanite
Kyanite is a blue mineral. Considered an exotic gem, it is rarely incorporated into jewellery
Prasiolite
Prasiolite is a type of quartz. It is green in colour.
Citrine
Citrine is a quartz. As the name implies, its colour ranges from yellow to orange
Ametrine
A mixture of amethyst and citrine, Ametrine is a type of quartz. A rare bi-colour gemstone, it is a mixture of golden yellow and purple.
Tourmaline
Popular in jewellery, Tourmaline is a mineral which has the largest colour range of all the gemstones.
Rubelite
Rubelite is a high prized variety of tourmaline. It is dark pink-red in colour.
Jadeite
Jadeite is the rarer and harder variety of jade. Its colour is green
Agate
Agate is a brown coloured mineral found in volcanic rock.
Peridot
Peridot is a yellow to yellow-green olivine, a mineral found in lava.
Onyx
Onyx is a silicate mineral, mostly made of calcite and is similarto marble and granite. It is most commonly recognised as black in colour, but is also found in white, brown and red variations.
Topaz
Topaz is one of the hardest gemstones and comes in a variety of colours – pink, orange, red, purple and blue. Blue is the most popular colour in jewellery.
Amethyst
Amethyst is a purple variety of quartz. It is extremely durable and resistant to scratching.
Aquamarine
Like it’s name, aquamarine is a blue to slightly greenish blue variety of beryl.
Turquoise
Turquoise is a blue to blue-green gemstone that has been used in jewellery for thousands of years.