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3.10 Ct. Purplish Pink Sapphire from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
This loose stone is available to ship now
Item ID: | P5249 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 8.87 Width: 7.08 Height: 5.36 |
Weight: | 3.10 Ct. |
Color: help | Purplish Pink |
Color intensity: help | Medium Intense |
Clarity: help | Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Oval |
Cut: | Mixed Brilliant |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | Heat Treated |
Origin: help | Ceylon (Sri Lanka) |
Per carat price: help | $1,480 |
This listing presents a GIA certified, transparent purplish pink sapphire weighing 3.10 carats, offered by The Natural Sapphire Company. The gem is cut to an oval outline with measurements of 8.87 by 7.08 by 5.36 millimeters and a mixed brilliant facet arrangement. The stone displays a medium intense color saturation, a clarity grade of slightly included as evaluated at eye level, and an excellent polish. The sapphire has been heat treated, a stable and commonly accepted enhancement for this material, and its documented origin is Ceylon, Sri Lanka. These technical attributes combine to create a gem that balances weight, presence, and wearable proportions for a variety of jewelry settings.
The purplish pink hue of this Ceylon sapphire shows a delicate balance between pink and violet components, leaning marginally toward the pink side while maintaining a cooler, slightly violet influence. Compared with classic Burmese pink sapphires, which often present a more vivid, warmer pink saturation, this example is more restrained, offering a refined and elegant tonal character rather than an overtly vivid statement. Against sapphires from Madagascar, which can range from intense, saturated pinks to more orange leaning pads, this Sri Lankan stone maintains a purer pink with a consistent violet overlay that reads as soft and floral under daylight. When set beside Sri Lankan padparadscha examples, which show a distinctive salmon or lotus hue, the purplish pink here is clearly more violet and cooler in tone, and when compared to Kashmir blue sapphires, the contrast illustrates how regional chemistry produces distinctly different color families, with Kashmir stones favoring topaz like blue saturation rather than any pink or violet presence.
The proportions and cut of this oval sapphire emphasize brilliance as well as color, with the mixed brilliant scheme designed to return light efficiently while preserving the body color. The depth, at approximately sixty seven percent of the average girdle diameter, supports the medium intense tone without pushing the gem into overly dark territory, allowing the purplish pink color to remain lively across a range of viewing conditions. The clarity, described as slightly included at eye level, means that there are internal features visible to a careful observer, yet these do not significantly impede transparency or scintillation thanks to the precise cutting and excellent polish. Compared to stones from other famed sources, Sri Lankan sapphires are often prized for their clarity and lighter to medium tones, whereas stones from some other locations may trade higher saturation for more frequent inclusions or different crystal habits. The heat treatment applied to this gem is consistent with standard industry practice for improving color and tone, and it is stable under normal wearing conditions.
From a design and selection perspective, this purplish pink sapphire offers a versatile and distinctive palette that responds well to a variety of metal colors and settings. In warm metals such as rose gold, the pink component is subtly amplified, creating a harmonious, soft presentation. In cooler metals such as platinum and white gold, the violet aspect is emphasized, producing a more contemporary and crisp visual effect. For collectors comparing regional characteristics, this Ceylon example sits between the vivid warmth found in many Burmese stones and the sometimes cooler or more orange leaning material from Madagascar, offering an assured purity of purplish pink that is characteristic of high quality Sri Lankan production. The Natural Sapphire Company provides GIA certification and documentation alongside this gem, supporting informed evaluation and confidence in provenance and treatment.





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