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classic Trimouns Mine in France
A gorgeous, perfectly placed 1.25-cm crystal is perched on a stalk of calcite matrix here, making for an exquisite thumbnail specimen that puts the transparent crystal up on a natural pedestal. This is complete all around except only one small sidecar crystal on theback of the piece, which is broken. The front is perfect for display. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. Shown here are both backlit and frontal lighting shots. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
This crystal is a single, gorgeous, floater crystal measuring just over 1.2 cm across - a full thumbnail with exquisite form and translucency. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. Shown here are both backlit and frontal lighting shots. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
This is one of the thickest clusters present in the lot, with a stack of parallel crystals measuring just a hair over 5 mm thick and nearly 2 cm across, balanced by an attached quartz crystal to one side. It is a significant example for this locality. The crystals are complete all around, and on all sides, even on the bottom where a small bit of attached matrix clings to their bottom terminations. Shown here are both backlit and frontal lighting shots. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
A complete, perfect, transparent crystal measuring 1.75 cm across, perched beautifully on small calcite crystals. This is a competitive-level, impressive thumbnail specimen. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
An impressive floater cluster featuring sharp, translucent crystals to 1.5 x 1 .5 cm in size. This is highly unusual for the locality, where larger specimens and certainly any CLUSTERS of this size are uncommonly found; and difficult to recover when found. For size impact and significance, this piece is a relative bargain compared to the premium charged for a perch on a bit of matrix. It is a floater, complete all around. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
This is an unusual cluster of robust, nearly benitoite-shaped crystals to 1.4 cm on edge, intergrown and forming a very 3-dimensional, complete, all- around floater specimen. It is a very rich and significant piece for the locality. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. Shown here are both backlit and frontal lighting shots. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
A large crystal for the locality, 2 cm across, sits on calcite matrix on this significant specimen from Trimouns. Two crystals in paralle growth reach almost 2 mm thickness each, and merge together to create one larger composite crystal that is very impressive. Shown here are both backlit and frontal lighting shots. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
This crystal (1.5 cm across) is perfect all around, and displays from both sides, perched up uniquely on a largeish rhombohedral calcite crystal and without any damage at all. It is a major example for the locality, and a competitive-level thumbnail specimen as well. No other complete crystal of this size was found, in this pocket, perched on a nice calcite crystal such as this. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now.
A superb specimen of perfection all around, and complete and display-worthy from either side. The main crystal is 2 cm across, large for the locale. A small allanite crystal seems to be included within, at the base. The crystal reaches several mm thick, robust for this style and locality. It has literally perfect aesthetics and is a significant thumbnail specimen of competitive level for the species. A note about coloration: In fluorescent lights, these crystals look more amber-brown than in halogen lights, where they take on a more orange-red hue. When backlit moderately, as shown, they take on a nice red glowing color. All photos here are taken under sunlight balanced halogen, with moderate backlighting. Joe Budd photos.These were found at the classic old French locality for rare earth species, in the late 1970s, and have until now been hidden away by the collector. For sheer quality and beauty, many collectors have long considered the gemmy rare earth crystals from here to be among the best of their species. The productive specimen zone at the locality is, I am told reliably, simply mined out and gone now. All Content and Design ©1996-2012 The ArkenstonePowered by http://mineralwebsites.comMineral Specimens by species; or by specimen id. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||