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Don't
heat or freeze the stone. Use lots of water while cutting and grinding. |
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Use
epoxy as your dopping material; never use dopping wax as the wax and the
stone must both be heated and heat puts the opal at risk of cracking/crazing. |
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Don't
abuse the stone -- be gentle, grind and polish with a light touch. |
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Be
sure that if you're using silicon carbide wheels that they are round --
a "true" wheel. (If the wheel is not round, it will slap the stone as it
rotates - abuse!) |
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Be
patient ... if you're working and you get stuck and don't know what to do,
don't do anything. Talk to someone (e.g. dealer) and ask what to. |
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Reduce
your machinery speed with controls or pulleys. |
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Do
not store opal in glycerine. Glycerine wants to remove water from opal. |
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Don't
chase fire! More often than not "what you see is what you get." |
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Clicking on a small
picture will
open a new window showing a larger version.
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The
first step is to look at the material as carefully as you can. Look at it
inside (candling), outside, wet, dry. |
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The
second step is to orient it. Determine what side will be the top, and the
bottom, etc. A common question is, "Which side should I put on the top?".
Answer: put the side on the top that is the prettiest to you because it
"faces" or windows the best. |
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Shape
it and get rid of all the hard, jagged edges. The reason: it is better for
the stone and easier to "see" the future gem. |
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Window
it (grind a little edge here and there just to see how it will "face up"). |
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Shape
it by drawing lines on it to guide your eye. I use a pencil most of the
time but I'm also using an indelible pen (Pilot, model SCUF). |
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Grind,
sand, and polish. Do it slowly and use a lot of water and you avoid all
sources of heat that you can possibly avoid. |
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In gem quality, opal is
considered to be an investment stone?
See the FAQ
for more info.
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| The
other KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid) rules are: |
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If
you're fearful of the stone just stop what you're doing take a minute and
relax. Otherwise you are almost certain to make a mistake if you're really
feeling uptight about cutting that stone. |
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You
need some practice to develop your skill. You should use the low-grade,
cheap opal in order to get practice cutting the material. Paradoxically,
the lower the grade the harder it is to cut the material into a nice stone
in comparison to higher grades but is cheap experience and you'll get the
"feel" of the material. |
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Use
the thinnest trim saw blade possible. I would never use anything thicker
than a .006 blade (6 thousandths). |
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A thin opal fire
band sometimes lends itself to making triplets, doublets, or mosaics. |
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If you have opal
that shows fire only from the sides and won't face-up, flat hishi-type beads
are a good cutting alternative. |
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Odd shapes of rough
are great for carving or for baroque settings. |
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Tiny chips make
beautiful floating necklaces or mosaics. |
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Small pieces cut
standard sized stones for replacement of broken stones, and are less expensive
than purchasing replacement stones. |
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One creative customer
of ours wants opals with irregularities (spiderwebs, holes, wavy fire bars,
etc.) for her very creative settings. She is doing very well! |
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You don't need a
faceter to cut a flat surface on the back of stone. What you need is a piece
of wet and dry sandpaper and a table. |
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Opal is not unlucky.
That is a myth. OPAL IS YOUR PERSONAL RAINBOW!!!!! |
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Placing opal in water will
simulate it's appearance when polished?
See the FAQ
for more info.
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| Seminar 2003
| Who Are We?
| FAQ
| Queensland Boulder Opal
| What Is Opal
| Opal Types & Composite Stones
| How To Buy Opal
| Cutting & Polishing
| Equipment & Supplies
| Jewelry
| Catalogue
| Brokerage Info
| E-mail
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