• The following is to illustrate certain artifacts with opals and to provide some general and technical information about them. There are more varieties than you typically see in most retailers, and there are a lot of synthetics out there. There are also a lot of doublets and triplets on the market.

    While either a synthetic, triplet or doublet might be attractive and affordable to many, they are not naturally. What’s worse is that most people don’t know the difference, and some entities will sell certain items without disclosing and explaining what these things mean. That’s the bad part. The other bad news is, if you want something natural, and good, anymore you’re going to pay for it if it’s of quality and pending the size and specifics.

    Natural opals anymore have become quite expensive pending on the exact type. Yes, there is more than one type of opal. Pending what kind of opal it is, and it’s particulars, you will pay more or less for it. They were quite popular during the 1980’s as they have a myriad of colors which fit into the outrageous trends of the time. So suddenly they became popular, and they were relatively more affordable than they are now. The demand increased, the mines in Australia are simply not producing as much material. The strength in the Aussie dollar against the US dollar forced a doubling in the prices alone, so something had to give. That something was the quality and the rise of synthetics with the exception of certain higher end jewelers.

    I’ve always been a fan of the more unusual stones, and things you don’t ordinarily see. The illustration below is a natural opal showing no evidence of enhancements that was purchased from AJS Gems. This is a 0.97 carat trillion cabochon magnified 45x.

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  • Dear Arnold, Rung, Matt and staff,

    I got my opal today to add to my collection. Today is a fitting day for these things as this day has a significant meaning to me.

    When I first saw the picture of the opal, I could tell 2 things right away. I knew it wasnt a synthetic by looking at the patterns of colors. That was readily obvious to me. The second thing I noticed before I even looked at the origin, I knew this was an Aussie opal. Someone wonders how I could tell, but its very easy. There is a bit of a floral pattern and an oriental character there, and you dont see that with synthetics. Lab created opals have a tell tale chicken wire pattern that you can sometimes make out with the unaided eye. The picture resembles nothing of the chicken wire pattern in the colors, or a lizard skin effect. Having said that, when you see that yellow flash, there is only one place that you see that yellow flash. Usually its either Lighting Ridge or some other locality. Regardless, this is without a doubt an Australian opal

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