Saturday, September 20, 2014

Most Valuable Sapphire Gemstones


You will often hear that the rarest and most expensive sapphire is the pink-orange Padparadscha from Sri Lanka. But while the Padparadscha is extremely rare, it is the finest blue sapphires that receive the top prices at auction.
The record price for a sapphire was set in April 2007 at Christie's in New York when an unnamed 22.66 ct blue Kashmir sapphire sold for $3,064,000, or about $135,216 a carat. It broke the record previously held by the Rockefeller Sapphire, a 66 carat blue Burmese stone.
The Famous Logan SapphireThis Kashmir sapphire was originally purchased by James J. Hill, one of the great American railway barons. He reportedly paid $2,200 in 1886 for thesapphire set in a pendant with diamonds. It was later donated to the Minnesota Historical Society by Hill's descendants. The Christie's catalogue describes it as cushion cut, unheated and having a richly saturated and homogeneous color combined with a very high degree of transparency. It was sold to an anonymous buyer.
The Rockefeller Sapphire was purchased by John D. Rockefeller from an Indian maharajah (believed to be the Nizam of Hyderabad) in 1934 for an undisclosed price. It is a 62.02 carat faceted blue sapphire, in a rectangular step cut mounted in a diamond ring. It was first sold by Sotheby's in 1988 for $2.82 million and then sold by Christie's in 2001 for $3,031,000 or about $48,871 a carat.
Famous St. Edward's SapphireNot all the finest sapphires in the world are from Kashmir or Burma. The Logan Sapphire, donated to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington in 1960 by Mrs. John A. Logan, is a 422.99 carat Sri Lankan blue sapphire. Set in a brooch with 20 round diamonds, it is the second largest blue sapphire known. The largest is a stone known as the Blue Giant of the Orient. It was offered at auction by Christie's in 2004 but did not sell, but reportedly sold after the auction for $1 million. Also from Sri Lanka, this stone is now thought to be in Switzerland.
Of course many of the most valuable sapphires in the world have never been offered at auction and are unlikely to ever be seen in an auction catalogue. One of the most famous is St. Edward's Sapphire, a blue faceted cushion set in the Maltese Cross atop the Imperial State Crown of the United Kingdom. It's exact weight is unknown but stories of its history date back to 1042 AD. The British crown also features a 104 carat sapphire known as the Stuart Sapphire; it is mounted on the band at the rear of the crown.
Some famous sapphires have a less distinguished history. The 733 carat Black Star of Queensland was originally a 1165 rough crystal discovered in 1935 by 14 year old Roy Spencer and used as a door stop for many year by his family. It was purchased by Kazanjian Brothers and cut in 1948.

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