Shain Mayer

My Google blogger account for all things life has to offer. Travel, bread, music, and gemstones.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

 

Cutting Index, fair market grades and unknowning sellers.

This is my responds to a thread on my favorite forum about offering a quality cutting index for lapidary materials, good idea. hope we can all follow through.

i always think an index of cutting/lapidary materials for the general consumer is a great idea, one thing one must factor in no matter the person selling the material or at what price is, all materials will have a grade factor to consider, and many sellers out there dont fully understand that factor when reselling rough. SO it comes as a two fold issue, based one on sellers and ethics of selling. Which usually will lead to what this thread has the potential is getting someone bent on bag talking about their material.
And two, the grade factor as all roughs will come with good and bad examples that are readily sold at fiar and unfair market values, both ways. (i dare mention the third factor of poor Identification of similar materials which i myself have made the mistake on)

I think a database is good, and i am all for contributing my input and photos into. But as bobby1 said about picking materials in sight and were one can see both wet and dry will always be the ultimate factor that dictates what good rough can be, even from bad stock. Which is a given factor for those in the know and have access to do such more readily and at true fair market prices than whats given from local and region standards.

So on a postive note about material that general has a good standing and is readily available at a fair market value , first up for my vote is Royal Sahara Jasper.
google image serach link

http://royalsaharajasper.3dcartstores.com/


This jasper though can vary in grade, from within the same piece. The yield and hardness is well worth the price. It takes a wonderful polish, has many abstract and classic picture scene potential. And each piece is quite unique. EVen if from slab to slab. I still have a few older cabs from rough i bought a few years ago and they are so nice. I plan to purchase more soon, hopefully with my tax return. I highly recemend the material at all levels of experience with lapidary. It can be tricky and sometimes you get a dud with more than 75% open core patterns. But its highly usauble in many lapidary forms. I bet it would do great as a carving.

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Monday, March 28, 2011

 

Hornitas poppy jasper slabs

I got 5 slabs off the large piece of rough I made booked out if for my mother. It's quality hornitas with a large white jasper area, gonna make some fine freedoms.
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Whitefir sagenite rough

While digging in my overtook a couple weeks ago. I ran across this piece of rough. I wasn't sure it was what it is until I cut a small face to window it. WOW what a nice example.
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Monday, March 21, 2011

 

Diggin in the overstocks during todays rain

ANd here is what i came across.....Horse Canyon super blue moss nodule! A piece of Gabbs Yellow/Black Opal Wood, A piece of Pyrite rock, a small little Morrisonite orb nugget, Rhichardsons Ranch Thunderegg, and a nice piece of Antelope hiding under some bunk. 

 
 
 
 
 
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Monday, February 21, 2011

 

Morrisonite or Carrasite?

It has a few small white plumes under the eye or core spot. Some nasty fractures though.
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Blue onyx rough

Argentina deep translucent blue color. Some inclusion layers, but very jelly like.
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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

 

more Royal Sahara jasper

Nice matching slabs and a neat end cut that looks like the face if a muppet.
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Tiffany stone

Love the oral fluorite, new off the saw.
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