Category Archives: Special Stones

The Hottest Item in the Keweenaw

Most rockhounds flock to Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula to find copper, but there are many other rocks and minerals that are much more rare. Any rocks and minerals that were not native silver or native copper were thought of as “Trash” and ended up on the mine rubble piles. Today we are aware of these rare treasures and dig through these old piles to find them. Unfortunately many of the spoils piles have been hauled away for fill or crushed and put under roads. Just imagine the treasures that could be found under the pavements in the Keweenaw!

I found this one inch beauty within minutes of sitting down to dig.  I just had to pluck it out with my fingers.

I found this one inch beauty within minutes of sitting down to dig. I just had to pluck it out with my fingers.

The current hottest gemstones in the U.P. are copper-included agates. Copper has replaced some of the banding in these agates. They are generally pink and often include green. These agates are found only in a few of the mine spoil piles here in the Keweenaw, and I do not know of any other place in the world where you can get them. They generally sell at premium prices (if you can find them). Some of these agates do not include copper, but are rare none-the-less just because they are associated with the copper mines.

Chris "slams" a rock containing agates.

Chris "slams" a rock containing agates.

The business end of Chris' slammer.

The business end of Chris' slammer.

There are two ways you might find these rare beauties. One is finding a “floater”, or an agate nodule that has broken free of any matrix. On a huge pile of rock, you could wish for a better strategy. The second way to find these agates is to find a rock with nodules and break the rock open to expose the usually small agates. The agates can be easily fractured, so care and a lot of finesse are required to extract them. Yes, they do show up on a sensitive metal detector.

My friend Chris has a custom built “slammer” that has a chisel on the end and virtually “slams” the rock apart. However, most of us break the rock with a heavy hammer and a strong arm. One rock I found and Chris broke open contained several copper agates, but it took some time and effort to get them out. A couple agates were sacrificed in the extraction, and Chris somehow bisected one agate perfectly in half.

Those that know (me) know that if I cannot make a piece of jewelry from a rock, I probably don’t need it. I am not a specimen collector, but I sometimes find specimens, and usually keep them for barter. I found a few “traders” already and look forward to a few more as the week goes on. I think that another Copper included agate hunt may happen tomorrow. I really had fun today.

Two perfect agate halves.

Two perfect agate halves.

They used to have convicts break rock as punishment, and we were out there doing it for fun. But we did get to leave at our choice, just about lunchtime! Smashing with the crack hammer is serious work, and Bonnie’s arm is still sore. I think IF I can keep her hammering for a few more days, perhaps her arm muscles will strengthen (good luck with that, Don).

By the way, Chris found the largest agate today, but Bonnie was a close second.

Victoria Stone Pendant-Ugly to Beautiful

I met a lovely woman at our last show named Sue. She was wearing a beautiful dark blue Victoria Stone BUT this stone was wire wrapped (I just do not want to say ugly); OK, it was a really ugly, tarnished, wire wrapped job. The primitive prong setting covered much of the pattern of this stone. I never cover a gorgeous stone with wire. I seldom say anything bad about a piece of someones’ jewelry, but in this case I had to speak up and be honest.

The ugly pendant.

The ugly pendant.

No longer ugly-notice the back side is now out.

No longer ugly-notice the back side is now out.

Sue’s husband had purchased the pendant at a garage sale and obviously got a good deal by his reaction when I told them what the stone was and what it was worth. I suggested that they allow me to re-wrap the stone, so that this Victoria Stone could be presented in a manner befitting it. I talked to them about Victoria Stone and its’ rarity.

They came back later and agreed that I should re-wrap this lovely stone. I agreed to do this overnight and you can see the results. I re-wrapped using .930 Argentium and 14/20 rolled gold. I noticed that the poor side of the stone was selected to be the front by the original wire wrapper hiding the side with the most chatoyancy, so I turned the stone over so the back side was now the front side in my finished pendant. I made the pendant so that if it does flip over as it is worn, it still looks good. I and Sue were delighted with the results. If you have an “ugly” wire wrapped pendant, and want results similar to Sue’s, get ahold of me.

This is the rear now.  Noticed it was the front on the ugly pendant.

This is the rear now with little chatoyancy. Notice it was the front on the original pendant.

Opal Fish Jewelry

One of my favorite unusual things I enjoy wire wrapping are really fantastic fish carved from seam opal. The opal seam is very thin and would be a real challenge to make a cabochon from. These fish are carved overseas and it is one of the few stones I purchase. As most of you know I generally cut my own cabs, but these fish are a whole different thing. They are one of those things I can’t help but buy.

A fine opal fish

A fine opal fish

Rear of fish

Rear of fish

Originally I bought fish with no idea how I was going to wrap them, but after thinking about these for several months I had a dream of how to wrap them using a prong set method. By using prongs, the wrap does not distract from the stone. I find by hiding the bail behind the fish they appear to be hanging from a chain, but all that is seen from the front is the fish. Prong-setting is an advanced wire-wrapping technique, which I developed with some special proprietary methods for this “fishy” jewelry.

These fish are carefully carved on the rear, just as they are in the front, but there usually is no opal on the reverse. Some of these fish have their own personality. The carving is different and the rock appearance is different, giving each one a distinctive look. Different body and tail positions on the carvings convey different attitudes. Some people even name their fish!

The fish come in several sizes and it takes a bit of “fiddling” to set the prongs correctly. Hey if it were easy everyone would do it! Everyone that has acquired a fish raves about all the nice comments they receive. You cannot wear one and expect people not to see it.

I have several fish I purchased in Tucson this year, so expect to see a few on this site after the summer shows. If you need one before then, let me know and I will photograph what I have available.

This one was a special request to add a lure.

This one was a special request to add a lure.

Another fish-front side

Another fish-front side

fishfrt2

Stones with Pictures Make Distinctive Jewelry

This month I thought I would talk about rocks with pictures in them. I love these, as do many of our customers.

biggs-picture

Fordite is for the warped (or intoxicated mind).  Get drunk enough and you WILL see pictures!

Fordite is for the warped (or intoxicated mind). Get drunk enough and you WILL see pictures!

Royal Imperial Jasper

Royal Imperial Jasper

OK. this IS NOT a picture rock, but it is a great picture of my favorite hunting areas near Lake Superior.  This one is from our campsite.

OK. this IS NOT a picture rock, but it is a great picture of my favorite hunting areas near Lake Superior. This one is from our campsite.

Landscapes are common in Biggs Picture Jasper and other western jaspers, but they sometimes show up in other stones as well. I have posted a blog previously on my “Dogman Pendant”, and some of the stones and pendants you see in this blog have been commented on before, but others are brand new. This will be good fun. You may see things others do not.

On some occasions finding a picture is just “the luck of the cut” as demonstrated by a datolite I found. If I had not had a lucky cut I would not have found Michigan’s Lower Peninsula inside it. The same holds true for the “Dogman” and many other lucky cuts I have made. I do not often recognize the unlucky cuts because the picture never materialized.

"Michigan" Datolite

"Michigan" Datolite

Mookaite from Australia on rare occasions has dendretic inclusions.
Mookaite from Australia on rare occasions has dendretic inclusions.

Old rockhounds, like myself, are often accused of having rocks in the head, so if you see strange things in stones, you may not be hallucinating. There are some people that just do not have enough imagination to see things. This is a shame. How can you go through life without having a little fun? I’ve been accused myself of being “a few fries short of a happy meal”, and I accept that as partially true. Check out all the rocks I’ve found with wonderful picture inclusions.

Arizona petrified wood often has pictures.

Arizona petrified wood often has pictures.

Paint brush Jasper from China.

Paint brush Jasper from China.

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Dendretic agate from India

Dendretic agate from India

Montana Moss Agate

Montana Moss Agate

owl-picture

I'm not sure where this agate came from, but it looks like and undersea adventure.

I'm not sure where this agate came from, but it looks like and undersea adventure.

A great set of Mookaite jewelry.

A great set of Mookaite jewelry.
A great dendretic Mookaite

A great dendretic Mookaite

REGAL JEWELRY

Bonnie interrupted my Easter TV watching to tell me I had to write a blog about Regal Jewelry, and “maybe make a regal piece” ( I’ve got to keep her from watching all this stuff on the upcoming royal wedding). As an experienced and alert husband, I know this means “get off your butt and do something”. So, knowing full well, based on experience, I can watch a fishing show and make jewelry at the same time, I got right on it. Good fishing shows are all the same; catch the fish, comment on “what a hog” it is, then throw it back, and repeat. So you don’t have to concentrate on it like you would if something is exploding.

Vitoria Stone with Citrine

Vitoria Stone with Citrine

I found a beautiful piece of dark green Victoria Stone and experimented with assorted facetted stones to see which ones looked good with the Victoria Stone. I chose a couple natural Citrine’s and man did they pop! A couple hours later I produced my take on Royal Wedding Jewelry.

Green and Pink Topaz looks like Watermelon Tourmaline.

Green and Pink Topaz looks like Watermelon Tourmaline.

Kentucky Agate in red and black always looks regal.

Kentucky Agate in red and black always looks regal.

Victoria Stone with assorted Topaz

Victoria Stone with assorted Topaz

I have produced several “Regal” pieces in the past, so here is a sampling. Regal jewelry usually features faceted stones, but not always. I think sometimes rocks alone can be “regal”.

Dinosaur bone, Sunstone, and Moonstone

Dinosaur bone, Sunstone, and Moonstone



Muonionalusta Meteorite with Peridot

Muonionalusta Meteorite with Peridot and Topaz. This would be "Regal" if you were an E.T.

Prehnite with Peridot and Topaz.

Prehnite with Peridot and Topaz.

This stuff is about as “Regal” as you can get. What do YOU think? Enjoy Don

New Machine and New Pendants

My new Diamond Pacific Xpert seems like a great machine. It produces the cabs wonderfully, and because I have used the Genie for 10 years, there is little or no learning curve. My unit is #8, and I am very pleased with it. I would recommend the machine to anyone.

My "bank" of polishing wheels.

My "bank" of polishing wheels.

I lined the Xpert up to the right of the Genie and am planning on putting worn wheels on one side of the Genie and polishing wheels on the other side. Some of the stones, like opals, require worn out wheels to work properly. I think it will be nice to not have to change out any wheels.

I’ve just cut and polished a large quantity of greenstones, mostly small, but many are old material from Isle Royale that would make great rings for some lucky individual. Greenstones seem to rising in popularity and I have recently finished a couple custom pieces that where well received by the owners. I have the largest selection of Isle Royale Greenstones on the Web for sale, and I get many hits in that section.

Wonderful blue druzy.

Wonderful blue druzy.

A very large and unusual Kentucky I cut from rough.

A very large and unusual Kentucky I cut from rough.

I have a couple new Greenstone products coming out in a few weeks. I’ll post them, when I make them.

I will post a few more pictures of recent pendants I made from the rocks I bought in Tucson. Some of these are not on the website, but may be available if you call. I will be selling loads of new stuff at this year’s shows, so check our show schedule on the home page and stop and say hello. Two shows just added are the Tulip Festival Show in Holland and the Ludington 4th of July Show. I expect we will also be in the Alpena area this summer. Follow our link here or check our show schedule on the home page.

A flawless Lake Superior Agate should make someone happy.

A flawless Lake Superior Agate should make someone happy.

Larimar (Pectolite) of high quality was expensive at Tucson.

Larimar (Pectolite) of high quality was expensive at Tucson.

Another change this year is the price of gold and silver (ouch). I am trying to keep the cost down, but it is hard when I am paying three (almost 4 times) what I paid when I started making jewelry. I still refuse to cheapen my jewelry by using substandard metal. I think my loyal customers will realize what a great values they still get from us.

Australian Black Opal (triplet)

Australian Black Opal (triplet)

Russian Staurolite I picked up in Tucson was some of the best I've ever seen.  Who else would make pendants out of this stuff?  This one is made for guys or gals.

Russian Staurolite I picked up in Tucson was some of the best I've ever seen. Who else would make pendants out of this stuff? This one is made for guys or gals.

Unfortunately we still have too much snow to go out rock hunting, but we did sign up for the Copper Country Mineral Retreat, put on by the Seaman Mineral Museum in Houghton. I would recommend this opportunity to search the various scrap rock piles of the Keweenaw. You WILL find something, and I see remarkable treasures found every year. Think about a big bulldozer turning over a rock pile exposing material that may not have been seen for 100 years, then releasing us rockhounds onto the pile. It’s just like an Easter egg hunt for adults. Visit www.museum.mtu.edu Click on the Copper Country Mineral Retreat.

I hope you liked this small sample of my new stuff. Come see us this year; check the “Upcoming Shows” list on the home page. I love it when someone comes to one of our shows and tells me they like my Snob Blog.

This is one of the strangest cabs I obtained in Tucson.  Calcite on Druzy Quartz.

This is one of the strangest cabs I obtained in Tucson. Calcite on Druzy Quartz.

Pietersite

I have difficulty when in the presence of high quality Pietersite. I just have to have it. In Tucson this year I told Bonnie I did not need any more Pietersite but the first thing I bought at the show was Pietersite cabochons. Many people are not familiar with Pietersite but when they see it, they want it! It has a magical shimmer, similar to tiger eye, but deeper and more eye-catching.

Gorgeous blue

Gorgeous blue

I can tell you that Pietersite is a pseudomorph variety of quartz. It has the outward appearance of Crocidolite fibers (asbestos), but this mineral has been completely dissolved with quartz taking on its fibrous formations.

The play of light that rolls across the stone takes on a cats eye appearance. Multiple colors and hues streak and swirl in all directions similar to brush strokes. Crocidolite’s original color is blue, so blue (in its wide range of shades) is the most dominant Pietersite color sharing the palette with rusty reds, golds and browns.

p3090042

Pietersite is one of the more recent mineral discoveries. It was found in Namibia, in Southwest Africa in 1964. I have been told by the miners that it is found in the river banks and the high quality Pietersite is not widespread. I can personally tell you that Pietersite is exceedingly difficult to polish. I cannot come close to the cabochons I find in Tucson with their glass-like surfaces.

p3120015

High quality Pietersite is not inexpensive, but worth it. The best stones are perceived almost as a holographic image, with a three dimensional depth. At every show people are awestruck by a featured piece of Pietersite jewelry. It is hard to capture this depth in a photo. You can be sure our pendants are all beautiful, both the stone and the wire wrap.

Druzy (Drusy) Quartz

While in Tucson we purchased a substantial quantity of Druzy Quartz, both treated and untreated. Treated druzy is very popular right now, both because of its fantastic play of color and its “flashy-ness”. You just cannot wear one of these treated druzy pendants without being noticed. We sold every piece we had last year so it was time to re-stock.

Both treated and natural druzy Quartz

Both treated and natural druggy Quartz

It is amazing how an ordinary piece of druzy quartz can be vapored with Titanium or other substances and magically turned into something extraordinary with such exciting results; each piece different than the next.

Some other druzy pieces that we found were wonderful natural druzy, not treated in any way. These natural pieces are generally higher, some much higher then treated druzy. I got so excited about this material, that I immediately made three pendants that are now for sale on this website.

Treated druzy

Treated druggy

Natural Druzy

Natural Druzy

On another subject, if you recall I talked about the double trilobites from Utah we found. I cleaned them up and here is a fine photo of a few of them.

Let me show you a couple other pendants I just made also. It is very difficult to photograph these treated pendants because of the color-changing properties of the coatings. I’m fairly pleased with how they came out, but consider that these Titanium units are much flashier and brighter then shown.

Trilobites (Elrathia Kingi)

Trilobites (Elrathia Kingi)

Yawah Opal

Yawah Opal

Blue Treated Druzy

Blue Treated Druzy

Paint Brush Jasper

Paint Brush Jasper

Thoughts on 2010

I first want to thank everyone that supported our business in 2010. Over this past holiday we made people happy from San Francisco to Boston. I am amazed that someone in Washington state would even know what a Greenstone is, or someone in Boston would be aware of Petoskey Stones. I think this is what makes the Internet amazing.

My daughter, visiting from Tucson, wished for a white Victoria Stone Pendant and amazingly, her wish came true.

white Victoria Stone pendant

white Victoria Stone pendant

Bonnie doesn’t ask for jewelry but expects a special piece. I made her a beautiful green Victoria Stone Pendant with facetted pink topaz enhancements.

Green Victoria Stone with pink Topaz

Green Victoria Stone with pink Topaz

I think I’ll make a few more of these for 2011 inventory.

I also made some cute Angel Pendants from gold wire a Swarovski Crystals. These were popular with the ladies this holiday season. Even though they contained no stone beads, they were great looking and fit the holiday season.angel

I will again in 2011 blog on a daily basis from the Tucson Gem Shows. Watch for this starting late in the first week of February.

We look forward to going to the Tucson Gem Shows again in February. My plan is to blog each day so you can pretend you too are there. You can follow me as I drain my wallet in a short period of time. There is really no place on earth you can spend so much money so fast and have such a good time doing it.

We wish all of you a very happy and prosperous (so you can buy more from us) New year.

Don & Bonnie

Times are Changing

People are turning to hand crafted jewelry to get the unique look that traditional jewelers don’t offer. The media and Internet are having a big hand in how people learn about nontraditional gemstones. I’ve been noticing a couple trends over the past year.christmas

One trend I see is many alert couples noticing that there are many more gemstones than the common diamond, that can, and should be used as engagement gemstones. The most recent royal engagement of Kate Middleton to Prince William is a prime example of this. A really big deal was made because the ring was originally worn by Princess Diana. Only minor mentions were made as to this ring being unusual as a colored gemstone being used as an engagement ring. Kate’s ring is a remarkable, flawless, 18 carat, oval, blue sapphire surrounded by 14 fine white diamonds, and is valued at around half a million bucks. Not the piece of jewelry you might find in your local jewelry store. Diana had this ring custom made for her in 1981 as an engagement ring.

This ring has spawned many rip-offs. Even QVC has jumped on the bandwagon and selling their replica for $39.54. Of course this stone that QVC has is surrounded by diamond-looking stones and has a silver band.

Another trend I notice is black diamonds and brown diamonds being advertised as chocolate diamonds. Back in the day the black diamonds, which are heavily ladened with carbon, were simply crushed up and used on diamond tools. The brown diamonds were used for the same thing, not considered a desirable gemstone. Times are changing, boys and girls.

I do not have to go too far out on a limb to predict that in the near future even more jewelry buyers will seek out alternate gemstone jewelry other than the diamonds, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, and topaz that the jewelry stores sell. This will be a gradual change because of the heavy advertising by the jewelry industry.jasper-2 But wouldn’t your own special stone lover treasure a unique picture rock or mookaite jasper or a moss agate or picture jasper that no one else in the world has a duplicate of? These unique hand crafted jewelry pendants are our specialty, unusual gemstones, wire wrapped with artistry and precision, and providing a lifetime of beauty.

The variety of jewelry sold by numerous jewelry selling networks on TV has been a boon to me and others selling the rare and unusual gemstone materials. These TV sales have help people change their attitudes and expand their thinking in regards to what is, and is not, a gemstone. I see things on TV that I never thought would sell in multiple hundreds. Things like jasper with names obviously made up by the these TV outlets. Things like dabacle rose spring sunset copper-included Christmas eve jasper. OK, I made that up, but you get the picture. I’ve got to re-name something with an alluring name that no one can resist. How about we re-name Greenstone to something like Star Light Pumpellyite. Hey Don, that’s a great idea!!jasper

We have turned snowy white up north and it brings thoughts of family and Christmas. We hope you have a wonderful holiday season. May visions of Datolite dance in your head.

Don & Bonnie

May visions of Datolite dance in your head

May visions of Datolite dance in your head