Their Ethiopian ones are quite flat or the colour play isn't vibrant or is limited to green and red. I did buy a ring when Gems TV first marketed what they called "Dark Opals" but it went back. Off-colour with just a flash or two of red & green - if you twisted it around a bit in the sun and squinted.
Yeah, this seems to be the problem with their opals. The white stones have hardly any play of colour, and those that do seem limited to just flashes of one colour - or, if you're really lucky, two. The colourless, transparent opals seem to be a thing of the past on GC now.
The opals with a yellow or darker body colour have little, if any, play of colour.
Ten-plus years ago, when I bought mine, Gem Collector's opals generally had a lot more play of colour.
I haven't even seen one in their "Bennett Vault" 18K range on Gems TV that I've thought impressive.
Don't get me started on that
"Bennett Vault" BS. I don’t believe for one minute that those stones were, as the presenters claim,
"part of Steve Bennett's personal collection that was securely stored in a vault in Geneva."
Considering Steve was once their main "gem hunter" and "gem expert" (Gemporia's exact words, not mine), and Jake & co. have spent years preaching about buying stones as investments, they’ve sold dyed blue chalcedony and filled rubies under this supposed
"Bennett Vault" range. Are they seriously suggesting that Steve paid to securely store dyed blue chalcedony? The cost of storing those stones (along with the filled rubies) is probably more than they’re worth.
I can only assume one of two things - either they're telling us fibs (I’m sure they wouldn’t do that, it’s not like they've ever been warned by the ASA for telling porkies...
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), or these so-called "gem experts" aren’t experts at all if they genuinely believe dyed chalcedony and filled rubies have any real value. I wouldn’t go out of my way to store them in an old shoebox under my bed, let alone pay for a "secure vault in Geneva."
The only stones they’ve sold recently that I felt may have genuinely come from Steve’s own collection were the Tunduru colour-change sapphires. Gemporia used to sell those years ago, but about eight years ago, they told us the mine had depleted and that they had no more material left.
Now, we’ve heard the
"we’ve got no more material left" line time and time again - only for those stones to continue being sold in mass (Nilamani and Argyle Diamonds, for example, were supposedly coming to an end two years ago, yet they’re still being sold regularly now - in fact, Nilamani seems to be on daily). However, the Tunduru sapphires never did reappear - so, on that occasion, they actually seemed to be telling the truth.
They ran one or two "Bennett Vault" shows around December time featuring Tunduru colour-change sapphires, and that’s the first time I’ve seen them in about eight years. So, in this case, I do believe they may have come from Steve’s personal collection.
They're just big, that's all and that's not good enough on its own, in my opinion.
Again, this is something else I could rant about. Once upon a time, the Lorique range featured their best-quality stones. They visibly stood out by a mile as being superior.
These days, poor-quality, badly cut, and heavily included stones seem to be put into Lorique pieces simply because they’re
big. I’d much rather have a tiny, extremely high-quality, well-cut stone than a massive, low-quality one set in 18k gold.
Their latest two parcels of Paraiba Tourmaline are shocking. They’ve got some from the original Paraiba mine in Brazil, but those are so heavily included that they look foggy or hazy, and they’re also poorly cut, with obvious windowing visible on screen. Meanwhile, the Mozambique material they've got is severely lacking in colour.
"Big" doesn’t equate to good (that's what my 7 ex-wives told me anyway.......
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)
I quite like my opals to have a body colour. I have grey, honey and dark brown examples where the colour spectrum is full, from reds all the way to violet.
I do too - just not from Gem Collector.
I have some GORGEOUS opals of a similar colour to the ones you’ve mentioned, including some very dark ‘chocolate’ opals. I got most of them from GemSelect over the years. They have great body colour and good play of colour. Unlike Gem Collector, you don’t have to sacrifice body colour to get play of colour, or vice versa. You get both.
Sadly, once again, it’s another sign of the times with Gem Collector/Gemporia - poor to average-quality stones sold at premium prices.
I've never been impressed by any of the Aussie ones I've seen on either channel. There was one, a few months back on GC, that was large-ish and semi-black but just too pricey. Much nicer ones are available online, with real photos and videos, from Aussie dealers direct and at very reasonable AUD$ prices.
I got some gorgeous Aussie semi-black opals and a ‘proper’ black opal (possibly the only one ever seen on the channel) from Gem Collector years ago - they were exceptional quality with great play of colour. You just don’t see that kind of quality on the channel now, though.
The semi-black opals I’ve seen in recent years look grey with no play of colour, and the other ‘black’ opals I’ve seen weren’t exactly black. They were more of a murky grey (at best) - and again, with little or no play of colour.