Price
1KG ROUGH MADEIRA CITRINE TOP QUALITY PARCEL IGC RC01
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Details
- SKU
- Dimensions (mm)
- 25 x 13 x 12mm
- Weight (cts)
- 5000
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Clarity
- VS
- Type
- Rough
- Colours
-
Description
DESCRIPTION
Citrine is the most popular gemstone in the yellow to orange color range, and one of the most affordable of the harder gem materials. A variety of crystalline quartz, citrine has excellent transparency and can be found in large sizes, with gems over 20 carats not uncommon.
Though there is a lot of citrine in the market, natural untreated citrine is in fact fairly rare, especially in the more saturated colors, since much of the low-cost citrine sold in the market is actually treated or synthetic material.
Most natural citrine is a pale yellow in color and the color derives from traces of iron. Many commercial grade citrines in the market have been produced by heat-treating weakly colored amethyst, which will turn yellow at relatively low temperatures, and golden to reddish brown at higher temperatures. Heat-treated citrine typically has a reddish tint. There is also synthetic quartz, produced by the hydrothermal method. The synthetic stones are characterized by very large sizes, perfect clarity, absence of color zoning and very low prices.
Deposits of naturally colored citrine are found mainly in Brazil, Uruguay, Madgascar and Burma. In Bolivia, amethyst and citrine colors can occur together in the same crystal. These unique gems are called ametrine.
The most valuable citrines are the natural gems in the saturated colors, known in the trade as Madeira Citrine. The name derives a fortified Portuguese wine made in the Madeira Islands. The color of Madeira ranges from golden to golden-orange to reddish-brown to brown.
Citrine's attractions are many. The earthy color is frequently a fashion favorite, while the affordability and large sizes are always popular. High quality citrine tends to be very clean, with no eye visible inclusions. Transparency is excellent, and the material takes a very good polish with a vitreous luster.
You will find citrine in a wide variety of shapes and cuts, including oval, round, rectangular, cushion, pear and trillion. Many citrines are given a portuguese cut for added brilliance, but even a simple emerald cut will show off the color and luster very well.
Citrine, along with topaz, is a birthstone for November.
Citrine is the most popular gemstone in the yellow to orange color range, and one of the most affordable of the harder gem materials. A variety of crystalline quartz, citrine has excellent transparency and can be found in large sizes, with gems over 20 carats not uncommon.
Though there is a lot of citrine in the market, natural untreated citrine is in fact fairly rare, especially in the more saturated colors, since much of the low-cost citrine sold in the market is actually treated or synthetic material.
Most natural citrine is a pale yellow in color and the color derives from traces of iron. Many commercial grade citrines in the market have been produced by heat-treating weakly colored amethyst, which will turn yellow at relatively low temperatures, and golden to reddish brown at higher temperatures. Heat-treated citrine typically has a reddish tint. There is also synthetic quartz, produced by the hydrothermal method. The synthetic stones are characterized by very large sizes, perfect clarity, absence of color zoning and very low prices.
Deposits of naturally colored citrine are found mainly in Brazil, Uruguay, Madgascar and Burma. In Bolivia, amethyst and citrine colors can occur together in the same crystal. These unique gems are called ametrine.
The most valuable citrines are the natural gems in the saturated colors, known in the trade as Madeira Citrine. The name derives a fortified Portuguese wine made in the Madeira Islands. The color of Madeira ranges from golden to golden-orange to reddish-brown to brown.
Citrine's attractions are many. The earthy color is frequently a fashion favorite, while the affordability and large sizes are always popular. High quality citrine tends to be very clean, with no eye visible inclusions. Transparency is excellent, and the material takes a very good polish with a vitreous luster.
You will find citrine in a wide variety of shapes and cuts, including oval, round, rectangular, cushion, pear and trillion. Many citrines are given a portuguese cut for added brilliance, but even a simple emerald cut will show off the color and luster very well.
Citrine, along with topaz, is a birthstone for November.
- IF YOU HAVE ANY PROBLEM WITH RECEIVE ITEM PLEASE DO NOT PUT NEGATIVE FEEDBACK WE ARE WELCOME TO SOLVE ALL YOUR PROBLEMS REFUND, RE-POLISH, RETURN, EXCHANGE ALL ACCEPTED, WE WILL NEVER LET YOU UPSET FROM US IN SHA ALLAH
- WE ACCEPT PAYPAL ONLY PAYPAL
Shipping
| Shipping provider | Shipping to Pakistan | Shipping to rest of world | Combined Shipping (Pakistan) | Combined Shipping (rest of the world) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
|
|
|
|
| Express Shipping |
|
|
|
|
Details
- SKU
- Dimensions (mm)
- 25 x 13 x 12 mm
- Weight (cts)
- 5000
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Clarity
- VS
- Type
- Rough
- Colours
-
Description
DESCRIPTION
Citrine is the most popular gemstone in the yellow to orange color range, and one of the most affordable of the harder gem materials. A variety of crystalline quartz, citrine has excellent transparency and can be found in large sizes, with gems over 20 carats not uncommon.
Though there is a lot of citrine in the market, natural untreated citrine is in fact fairly rare, especially in the more saturated colors, since much of the low-cost citrine sold in the market is actually treated or synthetic material.
Most natural citrine is a pale yellow in color and the color derives from traces of iron. Many commercial grade citrines in the market have been produced by heat-treating weakly colored amethyst, which will turn yellow at relatively low temperatures, and golden to reddish brown at higher temperatures. Heat-treated citrine typically has a reddish tint. There is also synthetic quartz, produced by the hydrothermal method. The synthetic stones are characterized by very large sizes, perfect clarity, absence of color zoning and very low prices.
Deposits of naturally colored citrine are found mainly in Brazil, Uruguay, Madgascar and Burma. In Bolivia, amethyst and citrine colors can occur together in the same crystal. These unique gems are called ametrine.
The most valuable citrines are the natural gems in the saturated colors, known in the trade as Madeira Citrine. The name derives a fortified Portuguese wine made in the Madeira Islands. The color of Madeira ranges from golden to golden-orange to reddish-brown to brown.
Citrine's attractions are many. The earthy color is frequently a fashion favorite, while the affordability and large sizes are always popular. High quality citrine tends to be very clean, with no eye visible inclusions. Transparency is excellent, and the material takes a very good polish with a vitreous luster.
You will find citrine in a wide variety of shapes and cuts, including oval, round, rectangular, cushion, pear and trillion. Many citrines are given a portuguese cut for added brilliance, but even a simple emerald cut will show off the color and luster very well.
Citrine, along with topaz, is a birthstone for November.
Citrine is the most popular gemstone in the yellow to orange color range, and one of the most affordable of the harder gem materials. A variety of crystalline quartz, citrine has excellent transparency and can be found in large sizes, with gems over 20 carats not uncommon.
Though there is a lot of citrine in the market, natural untreated citrine is in fact fairly rare, especially in the more saturated colors, since much of the low-cost citrine sold in the market is actually treated or synthetic material.
Most natural citrine is a pale yellow in color and the color derives from traces of iron. Many commercial grade citrines in the market have been produced by heat-treating weakly colored amethyst, which will turn yellow at relatively low temperatures, and golden to reddish brown at higher temperatures. Heat-treated citrine typically has a reddish tint. There is also synthetic quartz, produced by the hydrothermal method. The synthetic stones are characterized by very large sizes, perfect clarity, absence of color zoning and very low prices.
Deposits of naturally colored citrine are found mainly in Brazil, Uruguay, Madgascar and Burma. In Bolivia, amethyst and citrine colors can occur together in the same crystal. These unique gems are called ametrine.
The most valuable citrines are the natural gems in the saturated colors, known in the trade as Madeira Citrine. The name derives a fortified Portuguese wine made in the Madeira Islands. The color of Madeira ranges from golden to golden-orange to reddish-brown to brown.
Citrine's attractions are many. The earthy color is frequently a fashion favorite, while the affordability and large sizes are always popular. High quality citrine tends to be very clean, with no eye visible inclusions. Transparency is excellent, and the material takes a very good polish with a vitreous luster.
You will find citrine in a wide variety of shapes and cuts, including oval, round, rectangular, cushion, pear and trillion. Many citrines are given a portuguese cut for added brilliance, but even a simple emerald cut will show off the color and luster very well.
Citrine, along with topaz, is a birthstone for November.
- IF YOU HAVE ANY PROBLEM WITH RECEIVE ITEM PLEASE DO NOT PUT NEGATIVE FEEDBACK WE ARE WELCOME TO SOLVE ALL YOUR PROBLEMS REFUND, RE-POLISH, RETURN, EXCHANGE ALL ACCEPTED, WE WILL NEVER LET YOU UPSET FROM US IN SHA ALLAH
- WE ACCEPT PAYPAL ONLY PAYPAL
Shipping
| Shipping provider | Shipping to Pakistan | Shipping to rest of world | Combined Shipping (Pakistan) | Combined Shipping (rest of the world) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
|
|
|
|
| Express Shipping |
|
|
|
|
Store
IMAAN Gems is a family-owned business that was founded with a mission to provide customers with high....
กรุงเทพมหานคร - Bangkok, Pakistan
Owned by imaangemscollection
Verified
Recent Feedback
-
NegativePoor communication. Took nine days to dispatch my order, despite me paying for FedEx Express delivery. Very disappointing. Complete disregard to website's policies and service standards. Never again with this store.
Audit
The Gemstone Sheriff program allows our members to request an audit on any product, which is completed by an independent Gemologist who assesses the accuracy of the item description and pictures.
Shipping Details
Costs:
Transit:
10 days via Express Shipping
Ships from:
Pakistan
Payment Options
This seller adds 10.00% tax to transactions in Pakistan.
Overview
Listing Type :
Standard
Product ID :
1750372
Starts : 27th November 2025 03:33 am PST
* All prices are in USD