REBOOT. Rock Appreciation Day.

To get back into the groove of these I'm reposting an old Rock Appreciation Day from 2013. As these are all older images please excuse the image quality and old trademark.

For each 1st of the month a different stone or gemstone type will be highlighted and given information on. Jewelry examples using that month's stone will be featured along with current for sale pieces using the stone. As a general disclaimer, I am no lapidary (stone) artist nor gemologist. All information I post here is researched by myself and sources for stone/mineral information can be given upon request. 

For Rock Appreciation Day this month we have:  

King's Manassa Mine Turquoise

Manassa mine turquoise has also been called King’s Manassa turquoise, King’s turquoise, and was originally called the Lick Skillet mine. It is located in South Central Colorado near Manassa. The Manassa mine is reputed to be the oldest turquoise mining deposit in Colorado, and was speculated to have been mined by the Anasazi Pueblo peoples. The mine was “rediscovered”, or founded, by Israel Perviose King when he was searching for gold in 1894. He filed claim on it the next year. The mine has stayed with the King family and is now with his grandson Bill King.

The turquoise from this mine is some of my favourite. It is known for it’s deep greens with host rock rhyolite golden brown matrix, but can produce turquoise in a range of colours.

The turquoise can come in solid colour, bi-coloured, or with host rock webbing. It pairs beautifully with gold and some of the most saturated dark greens are among the most collectible. I love that turquoise from this one area has been used for over 1,000 years and is still seen as a prized and treasured finite commodity.

DSC_0162

Below are photos of pieces used with Manassa turquoise that have been sold or claimed.

il_570xN.239543577
DSC_0093
DSC_0058
DSC_0100
DSC_0084
IMG_2568
DSC_0044
DSC_0103
DSC_0021
photo-293
DSC_0022
DSC_0015
DSC_0079
DSC_0047
DSC_0007
DSC_0049
DSC_0153
DSC_0074
Picture 20
DSC_0152
DSC_0071
DSC_0179
DSC_0147

That's all folks!

If you have any suggestions for a stone or gem to be highlighted for next month please comment below!

Tucson Gem Show!

Alright folks. This is going to be a fairly long post, so hold tight.

To give a brief summary, I'm sharing my experience and rock haul from the Tucson Gem Show this year. Anything marked N/A in the photo is not available for custom orders. All other stones are up for grabs and will ONLY be fully reserved once you nail a design down with me and a deposit for said design has been paid. Please be aware that unless you've sealed a piece with me, I may be showing the same stones to others.

*********

So. I started in New England, looking at this:

DSC_0030

Packed up jewels from my personal collection to sport in the sun:

DSC_0045

Took a few planes...

photo 1-48

....and entered a region where aliens are abundant. Aliens. Yes. They are everywhere, in bizarre variations that look inviting yet are secretly hazardous...

And yes. I'm talking about these:

photo 2-48

I swear these are the weirdest, coolest things. I got so many, "Uhm how many photos of cacti is this girl going to take???" stares. I don't even care.

photo 3-41

photo 4-31

Oh yeah. There was also the huge gem show all over the city, that was cool too.

photo 1-52

(^natural rough Sleeping Beauty mine turquoise)

photo 4-28

photo 3-38

*********

Now, onto conquests.

*

DSC_0010

DSC_0024

DSC_0018

DSC_0023

photo 4-30

DSC_0028

DSC_0032

^Broken Arrow mine variscite. natural. straight from the mine owner.

DSC_0014

^Burtis Claim Cripple Creek mine turquoise. natural.

DSC_0012

^Royston turquoise and Royston ribbon cut turquoise. natural.

DSC_0036

^Royston turquoise. natural.

DSC_0038

DSC_0041

^White Buffalo turquoise. natural. Straight from the mine owner.

DSC_0044

DSC_0045 2

DSC_0049

^Blue Moon mine turquoise. natural.

DSC_0051

^Royston ribbon cut turquoise. natural.

DSC_0055

DSC_0058

^ left to right: New Lander mine, Peacock mine, Carico Lake mine, Number 8 mine (!!! truly!), Damele mine.

All natural.

DSC_0064

^the amazingly tight webbing in this one is hard to photograph.

DSC_0066

^this one has a very high dome.

DSC_0067

^ Sleeping Beauty mine turquoise. natural.

DSC_0072

^Fox // Cortez mine turquoise. natural.

DSC_0077

^old stock Number 8 mine turquoise. natural.

DSC_0086

^Royston turquoise. natural. Along with some strays.

*********

That's the haul folks! I hunted and enjoyed the skies of the Southwest

photo 5-17

Then I returned home to a series of snow storms. Fantastic.

Keep a look out as I'll be posting NEW ITEMS to preview here on the blog this coming Sunday before they hit the shops!

DSC_0010 2

*********

SALE NEWS

From tonight until next Thursday at midnight, enjoy 15% off of your order in the Main Etsy Shop with coupon code:

SNOWVERDOSE

in honour of there being too much snow here and wanting to empty the shelves in the shop a bit for new items! Sale does not apply to custom orders, minimum purchase of $25 required to apply.

*

KEEP POSTED FOR SUNDAY.

In the meantime, if you aren't in a sunny land, stay warm and bundle up!

photo 2-49

xx Stray Arrow

PREVIEW NIGHT plus Rock Appreciation Day!

Below are some of the jewels that will be going into the shop on Wednesday and Thursday...

*

DSC_0156

photo-304

photo-300

DSC_0097

DSC_0060

Blood Dagger Arrows

photo-227

DSC_0071

DSC_0174

DSC_0122

*

be sure to enter in the discount code if you make a purchase in the shop from now until Monday the 8th at Midnight!

*

*****************************

ROCK APPRECIATION DAY:

DSC_0173

For this month, I could only chose one stone. I'll be highlighting Castle Dome Mine Turquoise, as its become a staple for my Mini Cave Lady Rings! I thought about doing black pyrite for a second stone, but don't have enough jewelry pieces to use as examples. I'll have to plot and cook up something big for August!

*

DSC_0159

DSC_0167

*

Castle Dome turquoise is quite rare as it is a closed mine. Depicting bright light blues as it's signature, it is located near Globe, Arizona. Castle Dome is also referred to as Pinto Valley Mine turquoise, and it is similar to it's close neighbor the Sleeping Beauty Mine. Natural material of this is hard to get as most of the rough from when the mine was closed was stabilized and/or used for beads. It started, like many other turquoise mines, as a copper mine. Because of the mining methods used initially (aka blasting. yikes), many of the veins and structures of the turquoise later uncovered were extremely fractured. There wasn't much solid rough available for lapidary artists to cut.

DSC_0166

DSC_0168

Personally, I'm not particular to 'plain blues' in turquoise. This mine in particular, (and its similarly hued cousin the Blue Moon mine) has grown on me. There are very subtle hues in a lot of the Castle Dome mine turquoise that you don't find in your standard robin's egg blue or Sleeping Beauty mine turquoise. It has light "watermark" patterns, that aren't webbed or water webs. I adore pairing it with darkened silver, as it gives it contrast to highlight the stone. It also makes for a macabre pairing, and always reminds me of the bottom of pools.

DSC_0176

*

I'll be using more of this turquoise in fresh designs soon. What's pictured is all I have left!

xx Stray Arrow