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#11
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"None" wrote in message ... Hello, I'm a mewbe to the group. I am hoping for a little help. I ran across an ad that has a Tavolite ring and necklace. The stone looked nice so I thought I would see what it was. Well Google gives me back only 4 or 5 hits! Meta and Dog pile are no help either. I know this is not some just recently discoverd new mineral or gem, so what is it? Thanks for your help. Yes your spelling is incorrect. Tavalite is not a type of stone, it is a brand name. It is a CZ with a light film coating to make it iridescent (sp?). More info can be found here http://www.tavalite.net/ |
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#12
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On Wed, 19 Nov 2003 21:35:26 -0800, in rec.crafts.jewelry "Brian G."
wrote: Yes your spelling is incorrect. Tavalite is not a type of stone, it is a brand name. It is a CZ with a light film coating to make it iridescent (sp?). More info can be found here http://www.tavalite.net/ Thanks, Brian, for bringing this to us. I'd wondered whether these were something of the sort, but with just the word tavolite to go on, hadn't found much, so I was just guessing. I've little doubt that you've found what the original poster was looking for. According to the web site you mention, they also do this using natural white topaz as the base stone on which they deposit the coating. The publicity and articles they quoted seem to focus more on the topaz product than the C.Z. one, with the prime exception of the article in Gems and Gemology. The coating type appears to be a fairly standard technology, vapor deposition coating, and the product appears, at least the ones done in topaz, to be very similar to another product I've seen the last few years, sold as "mystic topaz". The coatings applied this way can vary a lot in appearance. In what's done here, there is first the actual color of the coating, which seems blue to green so far as I can tell in the web site photos. But what makes them especially interesting is that these thin coatings also give interference colors, which is the "irridescent" look, and that range of colors will depend on the light source it's seen under, and the viewing angle of the veiwer relative to both the stone surfaces and the light source. Peter Rowe |
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