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50 new specimens posted
A beautiful emerald with the vibrant green color and glassy lustre characteristic of La Pita Mine, 3.6 cm tall, contrasted nicely on its matrix. Recently mined in early 2011, this is a most unusual specimen in that the emerald is perched on, rather embedded IN, a large rhombohedral calcite crystal. The emerald is uncracked and unrepaired, remarkable for one of this size - they usually show stress fractures at this size. It is not a thin crystal either - you can look into its depths and see it goes into the calcite. The calcite is sawed on the bottom and back, where it had to be cut out of surrounding hard rock- this does not show from the display face, in any case. What is particularly nice about this piece, is that it is very , very difficult to get anything like this display size in an emerald, without breaking the bank. While there is a compromise in that the crystal is embedded in the calcite, you get a lot of emerald and a lot of green flash in a larger piece than one might expect, for the money. Joe Budd photos
ex. Phil Scalisi
An exceptionally sharp specimen composed entirely of intergrown, twinned, razor-sharp copper crystals grown together in a very aesthetic cluster ex Scalisi collection, and probably a very old piece from one of the museum collections he got into over the years. Joe Budd photos
ex. Harvard University
This specimen just SPARKLES with color. It features an intensely green , rolling, botryoidal growth of smithsonite over a matrix of plancheite (you can see the plancheite as the light blue at the bottom periphery). The smithsonite is then itself covered with a secondary layer of very thin, very sparkly, crystallized smithsonite that is probably not even half a millimeter tall, but adds a surface sparkle and reflectivity tha thte botryoidal smithsonite on its own, could not have. Interestingly, and a sure sign of the age of this piece, the smithsonite is also covering very rich masses of deep blue linarite tha tpoke through in a few spots where the smithsonite covering lapses. Although with slight damage at those spots, the deep blue contrast is quite pretty and I can accept the small wear in this context of a really unique and beautiful piece. Such a combination can only be from the upper oxidation levels here, prior to the 1930s in general. It is an old piece, once in the collection of the Harvard Museum. Joe Budd photos
At first glance, because of the vivid color and the size of the piece, most people would think this to be a Tsumeb Mine dioptase. And it DOES look the part…though it is in fact from Reneville (plancheite on backside is indicative, for one), and is probably older than the mid-1980s Tsumeb material of the same species, which fetch such a premium in part just because they are from the more famous mine locale. This piece has a tremendous display impact for the price, at a fraction what it would cost if it were labelled as Tsumeb. The crystals are sharp and there are many discrete crystals poking up, to over 1 cm. The color saturation is the best for the locality, a very vibrant hue which has some "life " to it and not so dark as to suck up too much light and color, as is sometimes the case. Joe Budd photos
While amethyst from the Thunder Bay deposit is not rare, such perfectly fine, richly colored amethyst with any aesthetics is extremely uncommon on the market. This razor-sharp piece has an intense, grape-juice color to it that rivals the best color of Uraguay. Upon close inspection, minute specks of hematite inclusions are visible within - proving the location is indeed Canada, or one might think it was from Uraguay! A small amount of underlaying matrix is also unique to the Thunder Bay area. The piece displays well in moderate light, for color saturation, though shows better when backlit. It is a major piece for the location, and just a damned impressive amethyst specimen in any case, on its own merits. Joe Budd photos
ex. George Elling
A deep green malachite specimen with a naturally smooth, rolling surface - characteristic of old finds at this now classic locale. The color and lustre and smoothness of the surface makes these stand out. Joe Budd photos
ex. Jason New
This very rich specimen of austinite features huge, translucent balls of sparkling crystals, to 4 cm across, on gossan matrix. It is a significant specimen of the species showing an unusual thick and large concentration of austinite, which normally just occurs here as thin crusts. From the well known Mexico collection of Jason New, which I bought in 2010. Joe Budd photos
This matrix piece features a centered crystal of pastel blue aquamarine, of absolutely limpid clarity and high internal brightness. The crystal measures about 4 x 4 x 3.5 cm in size and is pristine, not a ding on it. There are dozens of teeny tiny accent crystals that add sparkle to it, really apparent in person, coating one side. The muscovite matrix in which it is nestled contrasts with the form and color of the sharp hexagonal beryl. While Nagar aquamarines are common at some level, this is an outstanding piece for the price range and aesthetics, that I think rises above the crowd. Joe Budd photos
ex. Jason New
On its own merits , this is a beautiful display specimen with a nice pastel blue color, and interesting geometry. More than that, this specimen is one of the very best of its rarified style: a strange, splaying and curved, very robust crystal habit that came from a small find in the mid-2000s at this famous locality. I have never seen anhydrite from here, over 25 years, that looked like this. Sure enough, anhydrite is very common here and often single crystals are just sold cheaply as wholesale material , both now and in the past. However, this particular find, this style, I have seen only a handful of fine specimens on the market or in collections - and never cheaply. They stand out from the crowd of literally thousands of other Mexican anhydrites. From the well known Mexico collection of Jason New, which I bought in 2010. I know this seems expensive for anhydrite but...its really very different from the norm, and I think worth the premium to have such a thing. Joe Budd photos
Perfection. Complete all around, this specimen simply dominates with its aesthetics and sparkle. Even the matrix is crystallized and sparkly. Quite simply, this piece is considered by many to be if not the finest, than among the top few examples known of the species from the modern finds of this style (which are quite different than the old style from the 1940s, from another locale). It sold for a record price back in 2001, and then sold again in the sale of the Fuss collection (in 2003). It then disappeared for a number of years until it came across my desk recently, right as the painting of the piece came out as the frontispiece in the Brazil book published by ExtraLapis in Germany. ex Sandor Fuss collection. Joe Budd photos
ex. Evan Jones
An extremely rare specimen from small finds over the years here of beautiful , sparkly, fluorite pseudomorphed after scalenohedral calcite crystals. However, I have not had a specimen with such a large, robust, sharp pseudomorph arranged as aesthetically as this piece - they are normally jumbly. Moreover, the color here is a more saturated grape juice purple, though opaque, than other specimens I have seen which had a lighter lavender color to them. Admittedly, I have seen only a few to make that comparison with - maybe half a dozen? They are not common at all. The sparkle is in part due to an overgrowth of tiny drusy calcite. Excellent , display-quality specimen from the Evan Jones Collection. Evan sold off his Mexico collection in the past, and this then went into the well known fluorite collection of dealer Alain Martaud in France, from whom I obtained it when he sold that collection recently. Joe Budd photos
ex. David Stoudt
Beautiful patterning and an exceptionally sharp zoning make Laguna agates desired among agate and quartz collectors. This is a very showy piece with an interesting contrast between the core and the more subtly layered agate zones around it. Both halves are complete. Old material. The Laguna Agate area is about 150 miles south of the U.S.-Mexican border. Joe Budd photos
ex. Richard Hauck
An EXTRENELY rare locality piece of wire silver, from an old Arizona location. This is thought to have been found between 1910 and 1940 but there is no way to be sure at this time. IN any case, it is rare, and aesthetic, and just a surprising US specimen in general. Joe Budd photos
A superb, unusually sharp, 3.5-cm-long cinnabar twin sitting perfectly exposed upon contrasting matrix. Seldom do you get such a nice display on one of these twinned crystals, which generally were found in the late 1980s and early 1990s here. Furthermore, the lustre, and consistency of color, are both outstanding. No damage! Joe Budd photos. NOW DONATED TO THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION TO REPLACE SPECIMEN LOST IN THE 2011 EARTHQUAKE
The photos say it all, here. This is a spectacular specimen of upright, pristine and mirror-bright hematite perched on stunningly gem clear, bright, perfect quartz crystals, all on a granite matrix. The hematites are 3-dimensional and fat, not slender and brittle as so many can be. They show complex surface patterning, only marred by a few small specks of deep red rutile perched atop. Such specimens are quite nearly impossible to collect and find in the high Alpine clefts where strahlers literally risk their lives going after them. Many matrix pieces are repaired - this is not. Many matrix pieces are big and clunky - this has perfect aesthetics and is complete all around. The accenting cascade of small, mirror-bright hematites like a waterfall down the front-right adds to the eye appeal and sparkle in a case. Quite simply, for "American tastes" of perfection and display quality, this is one of my absolute favorite Cavradi pieces I have seen over the years. From a well-known collection in the US. Joe Budd photos
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