lapis lazuli buying guide - broochlapis lazuli buying guide - brooch

Lapis Lazuli Buying Guide


Our lapis lazuli buying guide can help you learn how to grade these gems, what to avoid, and how to identify a high quality stone or a bargain in the rough.

2 Minute Read

Lapis Lazuli Buying and the Four Cs

The IGS lapis lazuli value listing has price guidelines for cabbed pieces.

Color

Lapis lazuli gets its color from the sulfur in the mineral lazurite. (Crystalline lazurite is extremely rare. It generally forms as part of the lapis lazuli rock).

The highest quality stones have a blue to purplish-blue hue and an even color, with a tone of 75-85%. Bluer lapis tend to be in the lighter range, and stones with purple hues tend toward the darker range. Prices drop rapidly for stones darker than 90%, which appear dark and drab (Wise, 2016).

Clarity

Lapis lazuli stones are opaque, but most stones are included with pyrite, calcite, or both. Small, well-distributed pyrite inclusions can look like stars strewn across the night sky. American consumers greatly covet this look. However, gem graders would classify these inclusions as clarity flaws, strictly speaking. Larger inclusions mask the beautiful blue of the stone.

Calcite inclusions are undesirable and may occur either as streaks of white or grey through the stone or as small dust particles. Small calcite inclusions tend to grey the stone, as is typical for stones from Chile.

Cut

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Addison Rice

A geologist, environmental engineer and Caltech graduate, Addison’s interest in the mesmerizing and beautiful results of earth’s geological processes began in her elementary school’s environmental club. When she isn’t writing about gems and minerals, Addison spends winters studying ancient climates in Iceland and summers hiking the Colorado Rockies.

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