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2.59 Ct. Emerald from Zambia
This loose stone is available to ship now
Item ID: | E9575 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 9.03 Width: 7 Height: 5.23 |
Weight: | 2.59 Ct. |
Color: help | Green |
Color intensity: help | Intense |
Clarity: help | Included |
Shape: help | Emerald Cut |
Cut: | Emerald Cut |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | Standard |
Origin: help | Zambia |
Per carat price: help | $200 |
This transparent 2.59 carat emerald, cut in a classical emerald shape and measuring 9.03 by 7.00 by 5.23 millimeters, demonstrates qualities that appeal to connoisseurs who prioritize color depth and facet definition, The Natural Emerald Company. The stone carries a clarity grade of included when evaluated at eye level, and displays an intense green color with an excellent polish and standard enhancement. The emerald cut produces broad, linear facet planes that emphasize color saturation and internal structure rather than high scintillation. Surface reflection is clean and vitreous due to the excellent polish, producing broad flashes of green across the table and step facets, while internal inclusions create a soft diffused sheen in certain viewing angles rather than a myriad of pinpoint reflections. The combination of high transparency and intense color results in a strong, uniform light return that makes the hue read vividly under both natural and controlled lighting, while the emerald cut maintains a restrained, elegant optical character that highlights the gemogical provenance from Zambia.
When compared to other emeralds in its category, this Zambian specimen shows distinctive reflective behavior. Zambian emeralds are often noted for their deeper, cooler green tones and, in many cases, higher apparent transparency than some other sources, which in turn can enhance broad facet reflections and color saturation. Against Colombian emeralds, which commonly exhibit a warmer, more bluish green and sometimes a softer luster depending on inclusion patterns, this stone tends to present a more uniformly intense color plane with slightly stronger facet contrast. Against Brazilian material, which can be lighter and more variable in tone, the Zambian example returns light with greater depth and steadier hue. In practical terms, the emerald cut reduces dispersion and scintillation relative to mixed and brilliant cuts, so the reflective experience is governed more by color depth and polished facet mirrors than by fire or sparkle. Standard enhancement treatments typically stabilize surface-reaching fissures and improve apparent clarity, which modestly increases light transmission and coherent reflections. For jewelry applications where color dominance and classical, architectural reflection are desired, this emerald provides a measured, refined brilliance that distinguishes it within the category.

























