
Turquoise
The turquoise is ancient, yet again and again it finds
itself back in fashion. Its shining sky blue is one of the most popular trend
colors in the world of jewelry and fashion.
In many cultures of the Old
and New Worlds, this gemstone has been esteemed for thousands of years as a holy
stone, a bringer of good fortune or a talisman. It really
does have the right to be called a 'gemstone of the peoples'. The oldest
evidence for this claim was found in
Turquoise
affords protection and joie de vivre
In earlier times,
turquoises were even responsible for the material wellbeing of the wearer. The
Persian scholar Al-Qazwini, for example, wrote: 'The hand that wears a turquoise
and seals with it will never see poverty.' Turquoises were often worn on the
turban, and often surrounded with pearls, in order to protect their wearer
against the 'evil eye'. As talismans, they adorned daggers, sabres and the
bridles of horses. It was not until the time of the crusades that they came to
s up a direct connection between the
sky and the sea.
In South, Central and
At
all times and over the world, turquoises have been worn as natural protection
against the powers of darkness. If in earlier times they preserved horse and
rider from unexpected falls, they are regarded today as the protective stone of
pilots, air crews and other occupational groups who are exposed to an especially
high degree of risk.
In
modern gemstone therapy, those suffering from depression are recommended to wear
a turquoise or a chain with turquoise beads. The turquoise' cheerful color is
said to endow reticent personalities with more confidence. It is also often
given as a gift, a stone of friendship, for the turquoise is said to be
responsible for faithfulness and constancy in relationships.
The blue comes from
copper, the green from iron
Turquoise is a copper aluminum phosphate with a hardness of
6, i.e. considerably softer than quartz. In Nature, it occurs in the whole range
of hues from sky blue to grey-
green,
and it is mostly found in places where there is a high concentration of copper
in the soil. However, turquoise is only really turquoise in the very best
quality; mostly, the color is paler, or bluish-green or greenish. The blue color
is created by copper, the green by bivalent iron and a certain amount of chrome.
Often, the material has veins or blotches running through it, which are brown,
light grey or black depending on where it was found. These lively, more or less
regular patterns are known as 'turquoise matrix'. The crystals are
microscopically small and can hardly ever be recognized with the naked eye. As a
rule, turquoise occurs as a filling in veins or crevices, or in the form of
nuggets. The most well known deposits are in the USA, Mexico, Israel, Iran,
Afghanistan and China. The most beautiful turquoises, in a splendid light blue,
come from deposits in the north of Iran.
Turquoise is rarely
faceted. Usually, it is cut into cabochons or beads, or into some more
imaginative shape.
Wax makes turquoise
more resistant
Being
relatively soft, turquoises are sensitive. As the color may pale when the stone
has been worn for a long time, even high-quality stones today are treated with
wax and subsequently hardened. This treatment makes the sensitive gemstone more
resistant. In the trade, there are a large number of reasonably priced
turquoises sealed with synthetic resin. They have a fresh color and good
durability. However, many of them are dipped in a coloring medium before being
subjected to durability treatment - a process that must, according to the rules
of the ICA, be drawn to the attention of the prospective purchaser. And there is
also such a thing as a 'reconstructed turquoise', which is made from pulverized
turquoise.
Because of their sensitivity, turquoises are almost always subjected to
treatment of one kind or another, though this may take any of a number of
different forms. For this reason, turquoises which have a good natural color and
are simply hardened with colorless wax or synthetic resin have a much higher
value than stones whose color has been 'improved'. So it is more advisable to
purchase valuable turquoise jewelry at a jeweler's.
Heaven on Earth
The best quality
turquoises are of a pure, radiant sky blue, a color which is highly esteemed
with or without its fine, regular matrix. The more strongly the color tends
toward green and the more blotchy and more irregular the matrix, the lower the
estimate of the stone's quality.
Turquoise should be protected from cosmetics, heat and bright light. It is not a
gemstone to take with you when you go sunbathing. It is best to give it a clean
from time to time with a soft cloth.
The color of the turquoise makes us feel happy and cheerful, for in it the light
blue of the sky and the stimulating green of the sea are combined. Indeed it is
such an inimitable color that we have coined a term specifically for it in our
languages: turquoise. Anyone choosing a turquoise is sure to enjoy a piece of
Heaven ... on Earth.