Garnet

The oranges of autumn leaves, the glowing red
coals of a winter fire, the sparkling green
of a summer field, and the beautiful pinks of
spring flowers, garnet is a gemstone for all
seasons. Garnets are a closely related group
of gemstones that are available in every color
but blue. Dark reds, tangerine orange, vivid
lime green, soft bluish-pink, garnet is all
these colors and more.
There are garnets that change
color in different light, translucent green
garnets that look like jade, garnets with stars,
garnets that have been mined for thousands of
years and garnets that were just discovered
in the last decade.
Garnets have long been carried
by travellers to protect against accidents far
from home. In ancient Asia and the American
Southwest, garnets were used as bullets because
the glowing red color was said to increase the
ferocity of a wound. Garnets in legend light
up the night and protect their owners from nightmares.
Noah used a garnet lantern to navigate the Ark
at night. The ancient world is full of praise
for the carbuncle, the glowing red coal of a
gemstone we now know as garnet.
The name garnet probably comes
from pomegranate. Many ancient pieces of garnet
jewelry are studded with tiny red stones that
do look a lot like a cluster of pomegranate
seeds! Jewelry set with garnets from Czechoslovakia
was extremely popular in the nineteenth century
and Bohemian garnet jewelry is still popular
today, although today the garnets are mined
elsewhere. When you say garnet, most people
think automatically of small dark red gemstones,
even though this is only one corner of the world
of garnets.
Garnet is the birthstone for
January, which means that January babies have
a lot of choices! Varieties available, some
mineral differences and some color descriptions,
include rhodolite, malaya, demantoid, grossular,
hessonite, spessartite, hessonite, almandine,
mandarin, and combinations between these varieties.
One of the most popular is
rhodolite garnet,which ranges from pink to purplish
red in color and is mined in Africa, India,
and Sri Lanka. Tsavorite garnet is a bright
yellow green to grass green, and is mined in
Tanzania and Kenya. Legendary demantoid garnet
combines a bright green with dazzling brilliance
that won over the Tsars of Russia, who used
it lavishly. Unfortunately demantoid garnet
was only ever available in small sizes and is
extremely rare today.
Malaya garnet, another popular
mixed variety, ranges from orange to gold and
is mined in Tanzania and Kenya. Pyrope garnet
is a very saturated red: beautiful small pyrope
garnets found in Arizona are called anthill
garnet because they are mined by ants, who carry
them up when they are excavating their anthills.
One garnet growing in popularity
is a newly discovered garnet from Namibia, which
is a bright orange spessartite, is called mandarin
garnet because its color is a true orange. Hessonite
and Spessarite garnets mostly come in golds
and oranges and browns that are sometimes called
cinnamon garnets. Grossular, the variety of
garnets that gives us tsavorite, also is available
in pale pinks and greens and yellows.
Garnets are fairly hard and
durable gemstones that are ideal for jewelry
use, except for demantoid, which is softer and
requires more protection.
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