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Garnet
Garnets have been known and used in jewelry for thousands of years.
Legend says that Noah used a garnet lantern to safely steer his Ark
through the darkness of the night and the great flood. Garnets are
found in jewelry from ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman eras. Many
courageous discoverers and travelers wore garnets for protection, as
they were considered popular talismans and protective stones, because
it was believed in those days that garnets illuminate the night and
prevent their wearer from any sort of evil. Today science explained to
us that the proverbial luminosity of garnet is caused by its high
refraction of light.
Although the color red is the one which occurs most frequently, there
are also garnets showing different shades of green, pale to bright
yellow, fiery orange and fine earth- and umbra-shades. Only blue is a
color which is not available in garnet. Garnets are gemstones which are
in high demand and are often worked into pieces of jewellery -
especially since today not only the traditional gemstone colors red,
blue and green are cherished by the consumer, but the intermediate
shades and hues are also very popular. Garnets are unusual because
their tone can change depending on whether they’re seen in natural or
artificial light.
Some of the alternately-colored garnets are very famous. Spessartine
garnets are a bright orange to orange-red. These are extremely rare.
There is a type of garnet called a Mandarine garnet which is also
orange. It too is rare.
There are even green garnets, even though one doesn’t associate this
color with garnet. The star among green garnets is rare demantoid. It
shows enormous brilliance, higher even than that of diamond. Russia’s
leading court jeweler Carl Fabergé loved the brilliant green garnet
from the Urals more than any other stone, and liked to use it in his
creations.