
Green
tourmaline
The tourmaline is a unique miracle of color. The gemstone
comes in green, red, blue, yellow, but there are also colorless specimens and
black ones. Often two or more colors are found in a single tourmaline crystal.
Also rare and very highly esteemed are tourmalines, which appear to change their
color and cat's eye tourmalines. Having said all that, green is regarded as the
classical tourmaline color. If you ask a gemstone merchant about a tourmaline,
green, in most cases, is the first color he will think of.
However, even among
the green tourmalines there is a broad spectrum. Some of them are very light,
others so dark that the green color can only be recognized when the stone is
held against the light. There are green tourmalines in fine leek hues, but also
in intense yellowish-green, olive green and brownish-green nuances. In addition,
there are especially wonderful tourmalines in the range from blue-green to dark
bottle green. These, indeed, are its best colors. They are rare and much
sought-after. Green tourmalines are very popular as precious stones among women,
but many men like wearing them too.
How it is that a 'Brazilian'
tourmaline can come from
In the trade,
tourmalines are sometimes offered with a prefix on their name which, at the
first glance, would appear to hint at their origin. A bottle-green tourmaline,
for example, may also be referred to as a 'Brazilian tourmaline'. At this point,
it is useful to know that this does not necessarily mean that the stone comes
from 
Chrome makes green
tourmalines look like emeralds
Tourmalines are
borosilicates with a very complex structure. The colors are caused, among other
things, by tiny amounts of foreign matter and trace elements. Because of the
complex structure of this gemstone, it exists in an almost endless number of
varieties and colors depending on where it developed. There is something
fascinating about this individuality, for practically each deposit has produced
its own kind of tourmaline. With a little luck, now and then one may come across
a really special highlight in the trade: a chrome tourmaline. That is the name
given to the emerald green variety from
In the form of small, mostly dark crystals, tourmalines can
be found practically all over the world. The places which supply crystals so
large and beautiful that precious gemstones can be cut from them are, however,
much, much rarer. The major green tourmaline deposits are in

Not easy to cut
Green tourmalines
can be cut in all kinds of different ways. However, the cutting of a tourmaline
does require special care, since the color intensity of most green tourmalines
is variously developed depending on the direction of growth. For this reason,
dark stones have to be cut in such a way that the table is
parallel
to the main axis. With light stones, on the other hand, the table surface should
be perpendicular to the longitudinal axis, in order to receive more depth of
color. When aligning the cut, the cutter must pay great attention to these
facts; otherwise the cut gemstone will end up too light or too dark. And that
would be a pity, for the green spectrum of the tourmaline has something
fascinating about it, and not only in the eye of the connoisseur. The colors it
contains are extremely pleasant to the eye and harmonious. The green tourmaline
is like life itself, with all its facets of individual vivacity.