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  2. Chrysoberyl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysoberyl

    An alexandrite cat's eye is a chrysoberyl cat's eye that changes color. "Milk and honey" is a term commonly used to describe the color of the best cat's eyes. The effect refers to the sharp milky ray of white light normally crossing the cabochon as a center line along its length and overlying the honey-colored background.

  3. Synthetic alexandrite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_alexandrite

    Czochralski or “pulled” alexandrite is easier to identify because it is very “clean”. Curved striations visible with magnification are a give-away. Some pulled stones have been seen to change color from blue to red – similar to natural alexandrite from Brazil, Madagascar, and India.

  4. Alexandrite effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandrite_effect

    The Alexandrite effect has also been observed in some other minerals, such as fluorite, sapphire, kyanite, monazite, spinel, garnet, tourmaline, and rare-earth oxalates. Not to be confused with the alexandrite effect, some minerals also exhibit pleochroism. The former is a response to different wavelengths of light in general, the latter an ...

  5. Neodymium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neodymium

    Neodymium may be used to color glass in shades ranging from pure violet through wine-red and warm gray. [56] The first commercial use of purified neodymium was in glass coloration, starting with experiments by Leo Moser in November 1927. The resulting "Alexandrite" glass remains a signature color of the Moser glassworks to this day.

  6. Sapphire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapphire

    Certain synthetic color-change sapphires have a similar color change to the natural gemstone alexandrite and they are sometimes marketed as "alexandrium" or "synthetic alexandrite". However, the latter term is a misnomer: synthetic color-change sapphires are, technically, not synthetic alexandrites but rather alexandrite simulants.

  7. Heisey Glass Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

    During this time, a Cobalt color called Stiegel Blue was also produced. Alexandrite is the rarest of Heisey colors; it can be a pale blue-green under normal light, but in sunlight or ultraviolet light, it glows with a pink-lavender hue. Zircon is a very modern grey-blue and was the last new color introduced.