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2012 Tucson Show Update: Week 1

by Rose Marion, Wire-Sculpture.com

Tucson Show Update #1
January 27, 2012

Good morning from Tucson, where it’s expected to be 74° today and clear, sunny skies! I’m thrilled to be back here in Tucson for the world-famous gem, mineral, and fossil shows – usually at least 60 individual shows will be held during January and February! We arrived yesterday, and today is all about setting up our booth and classes area for our sister site, JewelryTools.com, who is hosting 120+ classes over the next couple weeks. I can’t wait to meet all the instructors and explore as many shows as I can!

We’re based out of Kino Sports Complex, at the Tucson Electric Park (TEP) Gem & Mineral Show. While the show doesn’t open until Saturday, when it will be free to the public (and free parking!), I thought I’d wander through the show while people set up their booths and show you what I found. Some vendors have been here for days or even weeks already, setting up their marvelous stock of gems! Take a look:

Assorted beads at tucson gem shows

Strands and strands and strands of gemstone beads at TEP Gem & Mineral Show - don't you just want to touch them?

Amethyst and citrine at Tucson gem Shows

One of the vendors here has a lot of citrine and amethyst! Since Dale wrote about them recently in her gem profiles, I made sure to get a few pictures. (Click to enlarge)

amethyst cathedrals at tucson electric park

Amethyst cathedrals waiting for the big day Saturday when the show opens!

citrine cathedral in tucson

A large citrine cathedral or geode - wouldn't that be an amazing display piece!

petrified wood in Tucson

The TEP Gem & Mineral Show had a lot of petrified wood to look at last year; this year it's a big thing again, too! These fossilized stumps are sure to be popular.

petrified wood slabs tucson shows

Here are more stumps and also slabs of petrified wood. This is just while the vendor was setting up - I will have to come back when the show starts and see if they have any cabbed or small pieces for me to play with in wire!

Quartz at tucson gem shows

Last but not least, I was just turning to leave when I saw these huge pure-white quartz crystals. Can you believe them!

We’ve got a busy day of setting up ahead of us, but I’ll be in touch again with LOTS more pictures and exciting gem & mineral updates from the show in the weeks to come!

Gem profiles by Dale “Cougar” Armstrong will resume after the Tucson shows.

By the way: there’s still time to discover the world of Jewelry-Making in terrific Tucson, Arizona! January 28 – February 12, choose from full-day and half-day classes that will transform your jewelry-making forever! In media including wire wrapping, beading, etching, resin, polymer clay, metal clay, chainmaille, and even more, just stop by JewelryTools.com’s Tool Tent #ES 14 at the TEP Gem & Mineral Show at Kino Sports Complex. Click here to browse all classes!

Take a Class at TEP in Tucson, Arizona!

Gem Profile Contest! Name that Rock!

by Rose Marion, Wire-Sculpture.com

Gem Profile Contest for
January 20, 2012

I know we promised a Gem Profile for today, and I apologize – there’s been a change of plans! We are nearly ready to head down to Tucson, Arizona – Dale’s been preparing for weeks, and with good reason – making kits for her classes at the TEP Gem & Mineral Show! – and we’ve been packing and planning around the clock, too. So please accept our apologies: we will be resuming the Gem Profiles, starting with Rose Quartz, when we return from Arizona, starting February 24. While we’re in Tucson, I’ll be bringing you updates each Friday (if not more often!) – and today, well, I thought it might be fun to do a little contest! How well have you been paying attention during the gem profiles? :) Click here to review our 34 Gem Profiles.

Gem Profile Contest: Name that Rock!

It’s pretty simple: Below are 8 pictures from Gem Profiles that we’ve published on the Blog. Simply leave a comment below identifying each stone in order, and you could win! (Don’t sweat it: If a stone is paintbrush jasper, we will accept "jasper.") The first 5 comments with the correct answers will each win a $10 gift certificate to Wire-Sculpture and 10% off all Tucson Jewelry Classes!

We have our winners! Here they are:

  1. Vivian
  2. N Irish
  3. Jeanne
  4. Dianne Courage
  5. Jana

Congratulations to our winners – be looking in your email inboxes for your prizes! Thank you to everyone who participated – we’ll have to do this again! :)

Still want to try your luck at identifying these stones? The answers are now at the very end of the post. Good luck, rockhounds!!!

Picture #1:

Picture #2:

Picture #3:

Picture #4:

Picture #5:

Picture #6:

Picture #7:

Picture #8:

 

Think you know them all? Leave a comment listing what stone is pictured, in the order shown, and you could win a $10 gift certificate!

 

Have a Wire Jewelry Idea you’d like to share? Click Here to submit your idea. You could be featured on our Blog!

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Answers: 1-amber, 2-charoite, 3-rhodochrosite, 4-pyrite, 5-labradorite, 6-velvet peacock obsidian (tricky!), 7-lapis lazuli, 8-picture jasper. How’d you do?

Gem Profile Jan. 13: What is Smoky Quartz?

by Dale "Cougar" Armstrong, Wire-Sculpture.com

Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip for
January 13, 2011

Today's Gem Profile is...

Smoky Quartz, one in a Series on Quartz

smoky quartz pendant

Irradiated smoky quartz crystal wire wrapped by Susan Mazlum and accented with crystal beads.

When macrocrystalline quartz is colored or tinted in shades of gray or brown, it is called smoky quartz. These gray shades can be very pale through grayed yellow-brown with or without reddish tints, dark charcoal colored or nearly black and almost opaque. Commonly found in vugs that formed in pegmatite veins, smoky quartz occurs in masses or crystals; the crystals being color zoned that sometimes grade toward amethyst or citrine colors. These crystals can be thin druzy crusts or giants that weigh nearly half a ton! Smoky quartz can also be found near water clear quartz or amethyst as well as inside geodes. The beautiful smoky coloration comes from inclusions of aluminum, calcium, lithium or magnesium. Natural radiation also contributes to the color, meaning that a lot of really "black" stones on the market have actually been cut from smoky quartz that has been artificially irradiated, or "treated."

smoky quartz gemstones

A few smoky quartz beads and one of the large smoky quartz stones in Dale's collection.

smoky quartz ring

Smoky quartz ring wire wrapped in sterling silver by Joe Peterson.


smoky quartz necklace

Jackie Morris wire wrapped this smoky quartz stone with sterling silver wire.

In Scotland, smoky quartz of a rich caramel yellowish brown has been used as a gemstone for centuries and carries the special title of "cairngorm." having been found and mined in the Cairngorm Mountains in the Scottish Highlands and it is the national stone of Scotland. Like several other cultures who didn’t like carrying coins, early Scots wore jewelry as a form of money. The cairngorm was also used to make Scottish "pebble" jewelry, "a mosaic souvenier jewellery made from precious metal and native stones." Naturally black smoky quartz that is almost opaque can be called "Morion" (which is also the name of a conquistador’s helmet, but the two have nothing to do with one another). The dark, lustrous smoky quartz found in Switzerland is known as "Alpine."

In Brazil, smoky quartz has been found mixed with citrine. Which came first? The smoky, that when heated during formation turned yellow, similar to the ametrine we spoke of last week. In some instances, the original smoky crystal is still "smoky" and the quartz that crystallized over it turned yellow, causing a phantom (more on phantom crystals later).

citrine smoky quartz stones

Faceted bi-colored, smoky-citrine stones that are waiting for me to do something with them. Notice the unusual smoky striations and fading color in those on the left.

When any quartz is broken, it is razor-sharp, so it makes perfect sense that the earliest known humans of the Americas,  Paleo-Indians or Clovis who lived 13,000 to 14,000 years ago would have used it to create work tools and weapons. If you scroll down to artifact #154 on this NOVA page, you will see a beautiful example of a smoky quartz "point," probably used on a spear. Ancient Romans also enjoyed smoky quartz and often used it to carve into their official seals, using the method we call intaglio today. Ancient Sumerians and the Chinese also utilized smoky quartz, by carving it into snuff bottles and small statues for home and ritual purposes .

smokey quartz buddha

Smoky quartz is often used to make into carvings and statues. This smoky Buddha is part of my daughter's collection.


whiskey quartz

A couple of nice whiskey quartz stones.

Marketing names for smoky quartz usually come from another name that imitates the color of the stone – for example, whiskey quartz. Natural whiskey quartz resembles the Scottish cairngorm, but most of what is affordable today is heat-treated to a lovely cherry wood color. Another name, root beer quartz, describes smoky quartz that looks like a brown beer bottle. However, "smoky topaz" is not a legal marketing name, as topaz and quartz are two totally different materials, and although it is considered archaic to call smoky quartz topaz, several folks still do. This misconception probably occurred when Scotland became known for its smoky quartz that was found in close proximity with natural topaz. Topaz is more expensive and softer stone, whereas smoky quartz is very affordable, more durable, and beautiful in its own right!

smokey quartz stones

A variety of faceted smoky quartz stones, some bi-color with water quartz. Private collection, Dale Armstrong.

flower intaglio smoky quartz

A close-up of the faceted stone in the above photo, showng the detail of the flower intaglio. Private collection, Dale Armstrong

Did you know that fortune tellers often use crystal balls made from smoky quartz? Metaphysically, smoky quartz is supposed to provide grounding for all endeavors and to negate negative energy.

smoky quartz crystal points

Susan Hironaka wire wrapped these smoky quartz crystal points in 14kt gold filled wire and accented them with freshwater pearls.


smoky quartz crystal

The huge smoky crystal that sits next to my work space, hoping to divert any negative energy and to keep me "grounded"!

Most of the smoky quartz on today’s market comes from Brazil and Madagascar, and a few other notable deposits are found in: Switzerland, Scotland and Russia. In the United States, a very richly colored smoky quartz can be found in the Pike’s Peak pegmatites of Colorado; smoky quartz is also mined in Idaho and can be found in Montana, California, Utah, Maine, and North Carolina. Unfortunately if you have smoky quartz from Arkansas, it is more than likely a milky to clear quartz that has been heated.

Next week I will tell you a bit about lighter colored, rose quartz! Have you made wire jewelry with rose quartz before? Email pictures to tips@wire-sculpture.com, and they could be featured!

Resources

Print Resources:

  • Love is in the Earth by Melody, ISBN 0-9628190-3-4
  • Minerals of the World by Walter Schumann, ISBN 0-8069-8570-4
  • Simon & Schuster’s Guide to Gems and Precious Stones by Curzio Cipriani and Alessandro Borelli, ISBN 0-671-60430-9

Internet Resources:

Gem Profile by Dale "Cougar" Armstrong

Click to Receive Daily Tips by Email


 

Wire Jewelry Resource: Gemstone Charts

by Rose Marion, Wire-Sculpture.com

Wire Jewelry Idea for January 11, 2012

The tradition of birthstones is a wonderful way to make jewelry that is tailored to a person that you haven’t even met yet. Simply keeping the birthstones in mind when purchasing cabochons, CZs, beads, and other supplies will ensure people will find symbolic significance in your jewelry as well as treasure it for its handcrafted beauty.

Whether or not one believes there is any metaphysical significance to the birthstones, we can’t deny the strategic power it wields for jewelry-makers. When a customer sees a ring display of a dozen or so colors in the same style, she’s already accustomed to expect that one in the display is her birthstone, and thus will immediately look for “her” stone. Additionally, a very popular gift for women is a “Mother’s” or “Grandmother’s” ring or pendant, which uses the birthstones of her children and grandchildren in a personalized jewelry design. If you can create rings or pendants in an assortment of stones, such as a multiple-bead or multiple-CZ ring, you will be very popular leading up to May for Mother’s Day!

Tradition has it that the birthstones originated with the High Priest Aaron’s breastplate as described in the Bible, and was standardized into 12 recommended by Tiffany & Co in this Tiffany-sponsored poem dating to 1870. Other cultures, including the Babylonians and the Tibetans had separate birthstones, as well as ancient Indian or Ayurvedic birthstones.

In today’s downloadable chart, we have researched several birthstone cultural traditions, as well as included an anniversary chart and a zodiac birthstone chart. An online version of this chart is available here (Symbolic Gemstones of the World) or click below to download.

Download this Jewelry Measurements PDF Download Gemstone Symbolic Charts (368 KB) | Download Adobe Reader

Click to Download!
click to download wire footage charts

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Gem Profile Jan. 6: About Citrine and Ametrine

by Dale "Cougar" Armstrong, Wire-Sculpture.com

Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip for
January 6, 2011

Today's Gem Profile is...

Citrine and Ametrine, one in a Series on Quartz

At the end of my macrocrystalline quartz article featuring amethyst, I mentioned that when transparent amethyst is heated its purple through gray hues will become shades of yellow, gold, and brown. The resulting product is better known as citrine. Natural citrine obtains its bright sunny color from iron oxide and usually shows uneven color zones, can be translucent to milky, and is extremely rare; therefore almost all of the citrine on the market is actually heat-treated amethyst or smoky quartz (the subject of next week’s gem profile). It doesn’t matter if a yellow quartz stone is natural or if it has been heat-treated, it is still legally named "citrine."

heat-treated citrine stalactite

Originally a chunk of amethyst stalactite, this specimen has been heat-treated to produce a lovely citrine, and resides in Dale's studio.


raw citrine wire jewelry

Judy Copeland wrapped this raw citrine in a harness frame, along with polished citrine heart-framed earrings and ring in gold colored round wire.

About Citrine

The name citrine comes from both the French word "citron," meaning citrus, and was most often associated with lemons and the Latin word "citrina," meaning yellow.  Extremely abundant and therefore affordable, citrine carries many labels that mimic its color. Some of these, produced by heating amethyst, are: lemon yellow, canary yellow, honey, yellow-orange, and yellow-brown. If a citrine is labeled lime or yellow-gold, it is more than likely heat-treated smoky quartz (more on that next week).

citrine wire wrap rings

Two wire wrap rings by Elaine Pataky, oneusing an amethyst crystal and sterling silve wire, and the other a citrine crystal and 14/20 gold fill wire.


I actually own a few pieces of what was sold to me as "top" citrine about 17 years ago, where the deep orange color at the bottom of the stone’s pavilion flashes through the facets, giving the stone an almost glowing effect. Of course with all of the new marketing venues today, different colors of citrine have been given new, more attractive names like whiskey, cognac, champagne, and "butterscotch." (I do have to mention here, that I had never heard of butterscotch quartz before and my research found controversial notes as to whether or not this is a natural or a treated type of silica; my guess is, treated!)

citrine gemstones

A variety of faceted citrine, from left to right: 3 "top" citrine, 4 cognac, one natural citrine, 3 lemon and 1 sherry. With the exception of the little stone in the center, all have been cut from heat-treated material.

Natural citrine deposits mainly of a pale yellow color are occasionally found in Brazil, Spain, Russia, France, Madagascar, Scotland, and Colorado, US. Heat-treated "amethyst" citrine can come from all over the world, as the least attractive and less vibrant purples of amethyst are chosen to turn into the more desirable citrine lapidary material, while deeper colors of amethyst are heated to create deep orange and sherry colored stones. Warning: no matter what the color, citrine will fade in bright sunlight!  

citrine beads

A 24-inch strand of huge, chunky, milky citrine beads. (I am still wondering why I bought these!)

Citrine can be used as the modern birthstone for those born in November. I believe this decision may have come from two sources. In the past, citrine was marketed as "gold topaz," causing citrine to be named "Brazilian Topaz" for a while and topaz is the traditional November birthstone; and one of the stones described in the Bible as having been used in Aaron’s Breastplate, from which most birthstones evolved, could have been citrine. So, topaz or citrine? The easiest way to tell citrine/quartz from topaz is to gently feel each stone. Topaz will feel a bit soft and almost soapy or silky, whereas quartz will feel hard and smooth like glass.  

heat-treated cut citrine

Heat-treated citrine can be found as very affordable, large cut stones!

Citrine is the anniversary stone for the 11th year of marriage. Legends tell of early Greek and Roman people associating citrine with the planet Mercury and it was believed to protect one from the venom of both a snakebite and evil thoughts and words, carrying "the power of the sun." Personally, I always have a large citrine crystal in my money bag, as citrine is known as the "merchant’s stone," said to attract money and success (every little bit helps!).

citrine beads and citrine jewelry

Part of Dale's personal collection of designer-cut citrine beads along with part of a wired design that is "in the process."

What is Ametrine?

OK, so now I have a question for you dear reader: what happens when Mother Nature creates a truly beautiful and rare stone that is highly desirable? Answer: man finds a way to duplicate or replicate it! Such is the sad truth about the lovely, bicolor quartz that we know as ametrine. Mainly found in one location on earth, eastern Bolivia, half of this stone is violet and half is yellow-orange. Ametrine’s commercial name comes from a combination of amethyst and citrine. Ametrine is also known as Bolivianite.

ametrine ring

Connie Drake wire wrapped this ametrine gem into a Pharaoh's Ring design with gold wire.

Although ametrine was known about by natives of the area for thousands of years, it wasn’t "discovered" by modern man until a few hundred years ago. The legend of the Anahi mine tells of a Spanish conquistador who received a dowry that consisted of a grotto covered in ametrine crystals, when he was to marry Princess Anahi. At the time, Europeans were focused on finding gold and silver in the "new world," so the beautiful crystals didn’t mean anything special to him. When it came time for him to return to Spain, his new bride planned to accompany him. However, her tribe wouldn’t hear of their princess leaving, and plotted to kill the Spaniard. Princess Anahi learned of the plan and warned her beloved, presenting him with the ametrine crystal she wore around her neck as an amulet. It is said that the princess than went to visit their special grotto once more before leaving her country with her husband, but then she mysteriously disappeared. When the Spaniard heard what happened, he and his crew fled for their lives, only later realizing what the bicolor crystal she had given him symbolized: her love of her country and of him.  

natural ametrine gemstones

100% natural Bolivian ametrine stones, some carved and some faceted that Dale bought when she worked with a gemstone vendor back in the early 1990s. Notice how they do not have a definite line separating the violet from the yellow.

Ametrine is relatively new to today’s gem world, as it didn’t make its official appearance to the lapidary world until 1979 at the Tucson gem shows. Naturally-occurring ametrine is truly a work of art that lapidaries enjoy cutting and carving it into a variety of items to be used in the jewelry making world. Because it is only found in one small country, the best quality natural ametrine, that with a perfect distribution and definition of both colors, soon became more difficult to find. Scientist Dr. Kurt Nassau developed the heat treat method that is used today to produce ametrine stones with "perfect" color balance. While heating amethyst to turn part of it to citrine, occasionally a raspberry color results; if this color is rather pale, it can be called champagne quartz.

champagne quartz

Two samples of what could be called champagne quartz.

Next week I will write a bit about smoky quartz and many of its variations, including a bit more on citrine!

Have you made wire jewelry with smoky quartz before? Email pictures to tips@wire-sculpture.com, and they could be featured!

Resources

Print Resources:

  • Love is in the Earth by Melody, ISBN 0-9628190-3-4
  • Gems and Minerals of the Bible by Ruth V. Wright and Robert Chadbourne, Harper & Row, 1954
  • Minerals of the World by Walter Schumann, ISBN 0-8069-8570-4
  • Simon & Schuster’s Guide to Gems and Precious Stones by Curzio Cipriani and Alessandro Borelli, ISBN 0-671-60430-9

Internet Resources:

Gem Profile by Dale "Cougar" Armstrong

Click to Receive Daily Tips by Email


 

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