Green Tourmaline
Green tourmaline is one of the most popular tourmalines for jewelry. Its properties and diversity of hues make it a particularly interesting gem, offering a multitude of creative options. Its success is relatively recent, as it was underestimated in the past, and has only increased over the years.
Green tourmaline is one of the most popular tourmalines for jewelry. Its properties and diversity of hues make it a particularly interesting gem, offering a multitude of creative options. Its success is relatively recent, as it was underestimated in the past, and has only increased over the years.
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At Bonnot Paris, our worldwide network enables us to meet all your requests for traditional or rare stones.
Each stone is selected for its rarity, clarity and ethics, guaranteeing traceability, exceptional quality and fair prices.
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The expertise of Maison Bonnot Paris is the result of an alchemy between tradition and innovation. Our stones are precision-cut, guaranteeing exceptional brilliance and symmetry.
Each piece is handcrafted in 18-carat gold, demonstrating our commitment to quality.
From the casting process to the final polish, each creation is the result of the meticulous work of four specialized craftsmen.
This collaborative process ensures that each piece of jewelry is a work of art in its own right.
Finally, we are committed to completing each piece within four weeks, combining speed and excellence.
Our know-how is the indelible signature of the quality and authenticity we offer our customers.
100, €1,000, €2,000, €4,000, €10,000 or more... anything is possible with green tourmaline prices, which vary according to the criteria defining quality, like precious stones.
Whether closer to green or blue, Paraiba tourmaline can fetch high prices. The most sought-after is turquoise tourmaline, with its electric blue or neon blue hue, discovered in the 1980s. The price per carat of green tourmaline is particularly high when the color is intense and the stone has remarkable clarity.
If you're interested in green tourmaline jewelry, this is an excellent choice, as this semi-precious stone has characteristics that allow it to be cut in a wide variety of shapes, including its hardness and the diversity of hues it provides.
You can have a green tourmaline ring created with an oval, cushion-cut, emerald-cut (rectangular), round, heart-shaped, pear-cut stone... This stone has been confused for centuries with other gems, notably emerald, and sometimes bears a striking resemblance to it. Another green stone to know (among several possible shades): spinel.
Many green tourmaline rings are in white gold or silver, but it is also suitable for yellow gold, whether very dark or very light, and even rose gold. For a solitaire ring, a halo of diamonds, a modern ring, a romantic style or even a man's ring, green tourmaline lends itself to a wide range of designs.
Green tourmaline is considered a protective stone, and is of interest both to jewellers for its elegance and to lithotherapy enthusiasts for its virtues.
It has many healing benefits and is associated with energy, youth, good health, balance and serenity, for both body and mind.
In lithotherapy, green tourmaline is often used uncut and unpolished, as well as quartz with green tourmaline inclusions, or tourmaline in other colors, such as black tourmaline. Pink tourmaline is also very popular.
Green tourmaline comes in a variety of shades, from light to dark. Tourmaline itself offers a wide choice of colors, including pink, red and yellow. This stone can also be transparent. Green tourmaline is called "verdelite".
The rarest color is blue. In fact, blue Paraiba tourmaline is highly sought-after. It can also show shades of green, and the name Paraiba tourmaline does not necessarily imply that the stone comes from Brazil. For 100% reliable information on your stones, we have them authenticated by a gemmological laboratory. Green tourmaline belongs to the silicate group and its hardness is rated at 7/7.5 on the Mohs scale. Major producers include Brazil, Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Russia and Afghanistan, as well as several African countries, such as Mozambique, where blue tourmalines and the superb Mozambique ruby are mined.
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