Advertisement

topic editor

Writer and Editor Claire Eddins, cltphoto

Claire Eddins -

Writer/editor, award-winning photographer Claire Eddins collects gems, horses, and obsesses over home, art, and design.

rss

Gemstones

Since ancient times, gems have expressed beauty, bounty, passion and power. Most gems, like sapphire, emerald, garnet, are minerals – natural, inorganic materials with specific chemical compositions. However, some gems are organic. Made form once-living organisms, organic gems include pearls, ivory, amber and coral.

According to the Gemological Institute of America (GIA), all gems share three basic traits: beauty, rarity, and durability. What makes a gem desirable varies gem by gem. Maybe its beauty coupled with extraordinary durability, as in diamond; or rarity in color and type, as in red beryl, purplish blue tanzanite, and green tsavorite; or it could be a stone's phenomenal special effects, as in the magnificent play-of-color in opal or glorious iridescence and orient of a fine pearl.

Leading Contributors

Latest articles in Gemstones