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This is an utterly superb and nearly unique v-twin of Rhodonite. The transparent red color, excellent luster, and habit are so rare that together this is a thumbnail rhodonite specimen beyond compare. It is unrepaired, BTW. I asked some Aussie friends about this habit and was told that it probably was mined some 60-80 years ago and that they are as rare as I thought they were. One collector said he remembered seeing one just like it in the stock of dealer Rob Sielecki over a decade ago, and we surmised this is probably the same piece. I know of no other similar that has been for sale, certainly.
A beautiful crystal from the recent finds at this locality in Brazil, with glowing red color and a good front display face. It has some edge wear atop, and is incomplete on the right side, but it is nevertheless a really large and showy crystal for the price. these are, historically, very rare in such size. I have sene some of thee labelled pyroxmangite, although others are labelled as rhodonite.
This is a new find of bright, reddish-pink, translucent Rhodonite - very rare previously! The color is even better than the old ones from Broken Hill, with few exceptions, and these are freestanding crystals without the usual Broken Hill pocket attachments. This crystal has slight contacting at the termination, but is otherwise complete.
This translucent tabular crystal is nearly a complete floater. The color is just amazing! It seems to have little inclusions of manganite crystals or some other manganese mineral, something I have never seen in such a piece yet.
ex. Ernie Schlichter
Sitting on a contrasting white matrix, intergrown, bright pink blades of rhodonite with good luster are arranged in a rosette pattern.
Rhodonite is rarely found in large enough gem sections to facet stones, and despite is simplistic chemistry, it is a relatively rare mineral. The only gem quality Rhodonite that I've seen is from the Morro da Mina mine in Brazil. These stones are rarely eye clean, but they are gem quality Rhodonite and very well known among rare gem collectors. This particular stone has a few slight inclusions, but the color is a pleasing pink (very similar to smaller Sweet Home Rhodos). The cut on the stone is a Freeform cut. There's truly only one mine where you can get gems of this material in the world. I must say that since the stone is somewhat small it was not the easiest gem to photograph, and it does look very nice in person, even though the photos are a bit fuzzy. Nonetheless, it is a beautiful rare gem to add to a rare stone collection. Keep in mind that not all Rhodonite is pink, as there are localities that produce dark brown Rhodonite which is not nearly as attractive as this material.
Well-crystallized rhodonites are rare from anywhere, so this find in Peru was met with great excitement by the collector community 2 years ago when they first hit. A few continue to trickle out, but I think the ones with this intense color were all early finds. They are superb for the species, with unusual isolation and translucency to the crystals. Moreover, they are just really PRETTY: roseate flowers of transparent, deep rose-colored crystals to over one centimeter.
This large cluster of rhodonite is in fact the finest such specimen in this size range that I have seen come from the finds here in the early 2000's. The curving 3-dimensional shape is appealing and really lights up a case with color. Crystals to 2 cm are relatively large in size, and the terminations are very sharp all around. I think it was 2005 or 2006 that a straggler pocket of this material was last hit, of any quality such as this - but most specimens have always been small in size. Historic finds of a more tightly packed, robust style of crystals were found in 1991, and further slender and more pale crystals were found in 1995 and 1998. But few specimens from the later finds had the COLOR impact, of this one, which compares favorably to the older 1991 material which is both rare and very highly priced when it does turn up. Joe Budd photos
The most classic Broken Hill mineral from the glory days here is probably the rhodonites, for their gemminess and intensity of color. I am told that most of them were mined prior to 1950, and many date back to the early 1900s work here. In any case, good specimens of this size are very hard to come by today on the market, and turn up only when old collections are recycled. It has been some time since I have seen comparable pieces to these two, for sale. This piece, the larger of the two show here, has a big fat terminated 2.6 x 1.1 x 0.8 cm crystal nicely excavated on a mass of smaller crystals. All are lined parallel to a direction of the plate, and look impressive as heck when lit well. The cherry red color here GLOWS with intense hue. Many more gemmy rhodonites simply do not have the intensity here, and many fatter or bigger rhodonites are included by matrix and do not have the saturation or lustre of these crystals, making this overall a superb display specimen. These two specimens of mine come from one large plate which turned up in the Wein Collection, an old German collection sold off a few years ago (and which the dealer sold as is, unprepped, to a friend of mine for $7500 - with lots of damage. I exchanged for it and have now prepared the blocky original piece to yield two finer, smaller specimens that I think are much better pieces overall ! ). Joe Budd photos
The most classic Broken Hill mineral from the glory days here is probably the rhodonites, for their gemminess and intensity of color. I am told that most of them were mined prior to 1950, and many date back to the early 1900s work here. In any case, good specimens of this size are very hard to come by today on the market, and turn up only when old collections are recycled. It has been some time since I have seen comparable pieces to these two, for sale. This piece, the larger of the two show here, has a doubly-terminated and elongated 28 x 6 x 6 mm crystal nicely excavated above a mass of smaller crystals. All are lined parallel to a direction of the plate, and look impressive as heck when lit well. The cherry red color here GLOWS with intense hue. Many more gemmy rhodonites simply do not have the intensity here, and many fatter or bigger rhodonites are included by matrix and do not have the saturation or lustre of these crystals, making this overall a superb display specimen. These two specimens of mine come from one large plate which turned up in the Wein Collection, an old German collection sold off a few years ago (and which the dealer sold as is, unprepped, to a friend of mine for $7500 - with lots of damage. I exchanged for it and have now prepared the blocky original piece to yield two finer, smaller specimens that I think are much better pieces overall ! ). Joe Budd photos
ex. Helmut Bruckner
Rhodonite from this mine is deservedly famous, and the specimens are highly desirable when they came with good color and sharp crystals. This is a piece from finds a few years ago that has superb , sharp crystals to 2 cm, in a beautiful spray atop a small cast of matrix. The sheer impact of the color is noticeable from across a room. The color is more red than pink, and would be at the top of the color scale for the material. Much of what you see is more pink, on the market. Also, the lustre here is about as good as I have seen for the material in recent years, as it has come from a trickle of pockets mined by hand since the major mining efforts here stopped. So, overall this is a beautiful specimen, in a good size range, with a fair singificance for the modern finds here. Joe Budd photos
Rare, sharp crystals of the axinite group species manganaxinite to 4mm , perched on minutely crystallized rhodonite with quartz. Beautiful combination piece. 4.8 x 3.6 x 2 cm
4.5 x 3.4 x 2.3 cm. A gorgeous and aesthetic, fan-like rosette of rose-pink rhodonite blades from the BRAND NEW find in Peru. Specimens of this quality from the 1980s Peruvian finds at Chiurucu were always difficult to obtain and expensive! Looks like a rose.
10.6 x 6.8 x 4.3 cm. An IMPRESSIVE CABINET specimen richly covered with large, blocky, pastel-pink rhodonite crystals on calcite matrix. This is CLASSIC, OLD-TIME material from the famous Franklin Mine. SELDOM do you see Franklin specimens with as many sharp rhodonite crystals. This piece is nicely assembled, with the largest crystal, 3.1 cm, featured at the top of the crystal cluster. SUPER orange fluorescence on the calcite. Ex. George Elling Collection.
5.1 x 2.5 x 1.7 cm. A RARE, gemmy, partially euhedral, deep cherry-red rhodonite specimen from the Wessels Mine of South Africa. There is contacting, but this remains a very showy, highly representative and excellent specimen for the species and it is not from Broken Hill.
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