- Stone8
- Reports3








2.22 Ct. Emerald from Zambia
This loose stone is available to ship now
Item ID: | E3135 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 9.1 Width: 6.96 Height: 4.6 |
Weight: | 2.22 Ct. |
Color: help | Green |
Color intensity: help | Vivid |
Clarity: help | Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Emerald Cut |
Cut: | Step Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | Standard |
Origin: help | Zambia |
Per carat price: help | $2,544 |
This listing describes a single transparent emerald, weighing 2.22 carats, cut in an emerald shape with dimensions of 9.10 by 6.96 by 4.60 millimeters. The gem features a classic step cut, a clarity grade of slightly included as evaluated at eye level, a vivid color intensity, and an excellent polish. The stone has received standard enhancement, consistent with established practices in the trade, and its stated origin is Zambia. At The Natural Emerald Company we document each of these attributes so that the gemological and aesthetic characteristics are clear and reproducible for lapidaries and clients alike. The combination of a well executed step cut and an excellent polish presents the color and internal character in a way that prioritizes saturation and planar light reflection over dispersive sparkle, while the slightly included clarity grade is typical for natural emeralds and contributes to the stone’s depth and authenticity.
Optically, this Zambian emerald exhibits a restrained, velvety luminosity rather than the high brilliance associated with higher refractive index gemstones. Emeralds have a refractive index that produces softer light return and low dispersion, so color saturation and internal depth are the primary visual drivers. The step cut amplifies broad flashes of light across the table and crown facets, producing measured flashes rather than scintillating pinpoint sparkle. The slightly included clarity means that some internal features are visible at eye level, which can interrupt the path of light and moderate overall brightness, but these inclusions also create subtle internal textures that allow light to scatter in ways that emphasize color zoning and depth. The excellent polish ensures that facet junctions remain sharp and that surface reflection is optimized, preserving the stone’s internal character while maintaining clean, even light return from the facet planes.
When compared to other emeralds and to green gemstones commonly considered in the same category, the reflective profile of this stone is characteristic of fine Zambian material. Compared to Colombian emeralds, which often present a more pure green with slightly higher translucency in comparable grades, Zambian emeralds can lean toward a cooler, bluish green due to different trace element chemistry, and they sometimes show a slightly different internal reflectivity that emphasizes a deeper green glow. Compared to green tourmaline and tsavorite garnet, this emerald returns light in a more subdued manner. Tsavorite has a higher refractive index and greater dispersion, which yields more lively brilliance and fire, and green tourmaline typically returns crisper, more scintillating light because of its higher clarity and different optical properties. Demantoid garnet and some green sapphires will produce more pronounced sparkle or fire due to higher dispersion or differing facet interactions. By contrast, an emerald such as this one communicates its quality through saturated color, planar reflections from the step cut, and a stable, enriched green that reads as luminous rather than sparkly.
In practical terms for setting and wear, the reflective qualities of this 2.22 carat Zambian emerald support designs that prioritize color presentation and protection. Settings that expose the table to allow direct viewing of the saturated green are recommended when the goal is to showcase color, while protective settings such as bezels, partial bezels, or halo arrangements optimize both security and the perceived depth of color by framing the stone. The standard enhancement reported reduces the visual impact of fissures and improves light transmission, which helps retain the gem’s vivid color intensity under varied lighting conditions. At The Natural Emerald Company we provide these details so that buyers and designers can align the gem to an appropriate setting and to aesthetic expectations, acknowledging that the reflective character of natural emeralds is distinct from more brilliant green gemstones, and that this distinction is often the defining quality valued by connoisseurs of colored stones.






















