Reflect s.a.l
We help you select the ideal gemstones and provide access to multiple calibrated pairs, ensuring perfect consistency and exceptional quality.
Round Drilled Beads | 8 mm ✨
➡️ Swipe to the end for a prayer bead example
💎 Featured
1️⃣ Black Agate — faceted
2️⃣ Red Agate — faceted
3️⃣ Green Agate — faceted
4️⃣ Hematite — faceted
5️⃣ Tiger Eye — faceted
6️⃣ Eagle Eye — plain
7️⃣ Freshwater Pearl — plain
8️⃣ Lapis Lazuli — plain
9️⃣ Malachite — plain
🔟 33 pcs prayer beads — Tiger Eye plain, silver tassel
Which one would you choose? 📿
📩 DM for more options
Citrine — Close-Up 🔍💛
1️⃣ Trillion Cut
2️⃣ Asscher Cut
3️⃣ Emerald Cut — Brandy
4️⃣ Rectangular Cushion Cut
5️⃣ Oval Brilliant Cut
6️⃣ Round Brilliant Cut
7️⃣ Pear Brilliant Cut — Brandy
8️⃣ Wide Pear Brilliant Cut — Brandy
9️⃣ Marquise Brilliant Cut — Brandy
🔟 Fancy Freeform Shapes — Brandy
💛 Citrine is a Quartz gemstone—alongside Amethyst, Smoky Quartz, Rose Quartz, and Ametrine—valued for its yellow to golden color from trace iron. Known for its warmth, transparency, and accessibility. Major sources include Brazil, Madagascar, Bolivia, Zambia, and Russia.
🌍 Natural Citrine rarely shows strong saturation. Most material is heat-treated Amethyst or Smoky Quartz, producing deeper golden to “brandy” tones—stable and accepted in the trade.
📈 Fine Citrine combines clean transparency, good saturation, and precise cutting. Larger sizes are widely available, making it ideal for bold designs. Not an investment stone, but quality material holds value.
🔎 Main Types
• Natural: pale yellow to soft golden
• Heat-Treated: golden to orange (Madeira / Brandy / Cola)
• Golden: rich saturated yellow
• Lemon Quartz: very light yellow (treated Quartz)
• Ametrine: mix of Amethyst & Citrine
⚖️ Compared to Topaz or Yellow Sapphire, Citrine has softer brilliance and lower density. Glass imitations may show bubbles and no natural inclusions.
🧼 Hardness 7 Mohs. Durable but avoid impact, chemicals, and prolonged heat/sunlight. Clean with lukewarm water and mild soap.
🏛️ Birthstone of November, associated with warmth and energy (symbolic).
💚 Emerald is a natural gemstone of the Beryl family—alongside Aquamarine, Morganite, Heliodor, and Bixbite—valued for its rich green color caused by chromium and/or vanadium. Unlike Diamonds, prized for brilliance, Emerald is valued mainly for color and saturation. Major sources include Colombia, Zambia, Brazil, Afghanistan, Ethiopia, and Madagascar.
🌍 Emerald almost always contains natural inclusions known as “jardin.” Unlike Sapphires and Rubies, it is not heated; the standard treatment is oil clarity enhancement.
📈 Investment-grade Emeralds—ideally 3+ carats—combine vivid color, strong transparency, minimal oil, and premium origin. Colombia (Muzo, Chivor) remains the benchmark and often commands higher resale value, though quality outweighs origin; a fine Zambian can surpass a weaker Colombian. Certification from SSEF, Gübelin, or GIA confirming origin and treatment is essential. Because inclusions are natural, stones with strong color and high transparency are rare and considered investment grade.
🔎 Main Types�— Colombian: vivid green�— Zambian: deeper, slightly bluish�— Brazilian: lighter green�— Trapiche: six-rayed growth�— Cat’s Eye: chatoyancy�— Doublets: natural layer with base�— Lab-Grown: identical composition�— Imitation: different material�— Nano: engineered composite
⚖️ Emerald may be confused with Tsavorite (green Garnet) or Green Agate. Emerald shows inclusions and softer appearance; Tsavorite is cleaner and more brilliant; Green Agate has uniform color and lacks Emerald’s crystal structure.
🧼 Hardness 7.5–8 Mohs. Durable but structurally delicate. Most stones are oil-enhanced. Avoid ultrasonic cleaners, steam, chemicals, and prolonged water exposure. Clean with lukewarm water and mild soap; remove before swimming or impact.
🏛️ Admired since antiquity—famously by Cleopatra—Emerald is the birthstone of May and gemstone for the 20th and 35th anniversaries. Traditionally linked to prosperity, passion, loyalty, patience, and wisdom—cultural symbolism rather than science.
30/12/2025
Agate Cameos ✝️☪️
➡️ Swipe till the end to see how they can look set in jewelry 💍
1️⃣ Cedar · Virgin Mary · Sacred Script
2️⃣ Full Collection
3️⃣ Cedar - 14 mm
4️⃣ Sacred Script - 16 x 12 mm
5️⃣ Fleur-de-Lis - 14 x 10 mm
6️⃣ Cross - 14 x 10 mm
7️⃣ Halo Virgin Mary - 40 x 30 mm
8️⃣ Saint Charbel - 16 x 12 mm
9️⃣ Virgin Mary Pendant with Melee Diamonds
🔟 Saint Charbel Bracelet with Melee Diamonds
Agate Cameos are made from Banded Chalcedony of the Quartz family, selected specifically for their natural dark-and-light layering. This material forms in volcanic cavities where silica crystallizes in distinct zones and is traditionally sourced from Brazil, Uruguay, India, and Madagascar, regions known for carving-grade Agate with strong internal contrast.
The white visible in cameo designs is Natural Chalcedony, revealed by carving, not paint or inlay. This effect occurs only in Banded Agates, which are less common and intentionally selected, as removing the darker surface permanently exposes the lighter layer beneath.
Cameo carving is achieved through precision cutting. With a hardness of 6.5–7 on the Mohs Scale, Agate allows fine detail while remaining durable. Avoid hard impacts. Clean with mild soap, lukewarm water, and a soft cloth. Avoid chemicals and ultrasonic cleaning.
Agate Cameos are valued for high contrast, permanent detail, and centuries of historical use in seals, devotional jewelry, and identity stones. Their hardness, layered structure, and color stability make them ideal for long-lasting carved jewelry.
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