What gemstones are used for
When we speak of gemstones, we usually mean minerals that have been cut and polished.
However, over the ages, humans have used a great variety of materials for decoration.
Minerals have been cut and polished, and organic materials like coral, pearls, amber
and ivory have been fashioned. Small fossils are often set in jewellery. Widespread
materials like horn, bone, shells, seeds, even wood abound, as well as made materials
like glass and pottery.
Not all minerals are suitable for gemstones. As well as beauty, a mineral must possess
hardness and stability, and occur in crystals or masses large enough for cutting. Such
material is very rare. Many minerals are small, opaque or easily damaged. Of over 4000
known minerals, only about 100 minerals are ever worked and only about 20 are commonly
used in jewellery.
A number of opaque minerals and rocks with attractive colours and patterns are polished
to make beads, carvings, bowls and decorative items. Such minerals are broadly termed
'ornamentals'
Some gemstones are too fragile for wear or use and yet they are faceted because of their
beauty and rarity. These gemstones are known as collectors' stones and are prized by
individual collectors and museums. They present a challenge to the cutter because of their
softness, perfect cleavage or sensitivity to heat or light.
They are wonders of the cutter's art, often revealing unexpected worlds of beauty inside
an unlikely mineral.