Privacy Policy

We welcome you to our website and respect your right to privacy.

By viewing this website, you acknowledge that you have read and accept the following Protection of Personal Information (POPI) disclaimer.

Please note that by submitting information via this website, you consent to the collection, collation, processing, storing of such information and the use and disclosure of such information.

These terms and conditions govern your use of this website. By using this website, you accept these terms and conditions in full. If you disagree with these terms and conditions or any part of these terms and conditions, you should not use this website.

We will take all reasonable measures to protect the personal information of users and for the purpose of this disclaimer “personal information” shall be defined as detailed in the Promotion of Access to Information and Protection of Personal Information Act, Act 4 of 2013 (“POPI”).

The POPI Act is available online at:

www.gov.za/documents/acts.

The amendments listed on www.acts.co.za may be viewed at:

https://www.acts.co.za/promotion-of-access-to-information/promotion_of_access_to_informa

www.acts.co.za/protection-of-personal-information-act-2013/index.html

According to the POPI Act definition, personal information refers to information that identifies or relates specifically to you, for example, your name, age, gender, identity number and your email address.

We collect, amongst others, the following personal and Information Technology User information:

  • Personal details, such as your name, email address, domicile and work address, telephone numbers, Information Technology authentication;
  • Billing information, such as relevant payment information and VAT registration number; and
  • Legally required information, which includes any additional information that the law requires from us to verify your identity.

We collect, store and use the User’s information for several purposes:

  • To communicate requested information to the Client, or the User’s relevant authority.
  • To provide services to the User as requested by the Client, or the User’s relevant authority.
  • To authenticate Users.
  • To contact Clients regarding current or new Products, Features or Services or any other Products offered by us.
  • To compile non-personal statistical information for the Client, or the User’s relevant authority

Whenever you use our website, complete an application form, contact us electronically or use one of the services or facilities offered by us, we will collect your personal information.

The information we maintain concerning our clients is stored with safeguards to ensure its privacy and confidentiality.

We will not disclose the client’s personal information to any third party other than as set out below:

  • To law enforcement, government officials, fraud detection agencies or other third parties if we believe in good faith that the disclosure of personal information is necessary to prevent physical harm or financial loss, to report suspected illegal activity, or to investigate violations of the Privacy Policy.
  • If use or disclosure is required to comply with any applicable law, subpoena, order of court or legal process served on us, or to protect and defend our rights or property.

We will:

  • Promptly notify Clients if we become aware of any unauthorised use, disclosure or processing of the user’s personal information.
  • Upon the user’s request, promptly return or destroy all of the user’s personal information in our possession or control, save for that which we are legally obliged to retain.
  • Undertake to never sell or make the user’s personal information available to any third party other than as provided for in this Policy unless we are compelled to do so by law. We are entitled to disclose relevant personal information for criminal investigation purposes or in line with any other legal obligation for disclosure of the personal information which may be required of it.
  • Do all things reasonably necessary to protect the user’s rights of Privacy, however, we cannot guarantee or accept any liability whatsoever for unauthorised or unlawful disclosures of the user’s personal information, whilst in our possession, made by third parties who are not subject to our control, unless such disclosure is because of our gross negligence.

Whenever you use our website, contact us electronically or use one of our services, we will collect your personal information. Users agree to provide accurate and current information, and not to impersonate or misrepresent any person or entity or falsely state or otherwise misrepresent the user’s affiliation with anyone or anything.

We accept no liability whatsoever for any loss, damage (whether direct, indirect, special or consequential) and/or expenses of any nature whatsoever which may arise as a result of, or which may be attributable directly or indirectly from information made available on these pages or links, or actions or transaction resulting therefrom.

Unless otherwise stated, we own the intellectual property rights on the website and material on the website.

If the User believes that we have not adhered to this policy, need further information about our privacy practices, wish to give or withdraw consent, exercise preferences, access or correct personal information, please contact us at the information provided:

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ZIRCON

Zircon is a colorful gem with high refraction and fire that’s unfairly confused with cubic zirconia.

The Facts

Optical properties make it bright and lustrous. Best known for its brilliant blue hues; also comes in warm autumnal yellows and reddish browns, as well as red and green hues.

SPINEL

The Black Prince’s Ruby. The Timur Ruby. For centuries, spinel, the great imposter, masqueraded as ruby in Europe’s crown jewels.

The Facts

Although frequently confused with ruby, spinel stands on its own merits. Available in a striking array of colors, its long history includes many famous large spinels still in existence.

TURQUOISE

Azure sky, robin’s egg blue: Vivid shades of turquoise define the color that’s named after this gem.

The Facts

Ancient peoples from Egypt to Mesoamerica and China treasured this vivid blue gem. It’s a rare phosphate of copper that only forms in the earth’s most dry and barren regions.

TOURMALINE

Tourmalines have a variety of exciting colors with one of the widest color ranges of any gem.

The Facts

Comes in many colors, including the remarkable intense violet-to-blue gems particular to Paraíba, Brazil, and similar blues from Africa. Favorite of mineral collectors.

TOPAZ

Honey yellow. Fiery orange. Cyclamen pink. Icy blue. In warm or cool tones, topaz is a lustrous and brilliant gem.

The Facts

Colorless topaz treated to blue is a mass-market gem. Fine pink-to-red, purple, or orange gems are one-of-a-kind pieces. Top sources include Ouro Prêto, Brazil, and Russia’s Ural Mountains.

TANZANITE

Poised between lush blue, vibrant violet, and rich purple, exotic tanzanite is found in only one place on earth, near majestic Mount Kilimanjaro.

The Facts

Named for Tanzania, the country where it was discovered in 1967, tanzanite is the blue-to-violet or purple variety of the mineral zoisite. It’s become one of the most popular of colored gemstones.

SUNSTONE

Sunstone’s phenomenal varieties show a distinct and lively glitter called aventurescence.

The Facts

Sunstone, a member of the feldspar group, can be an orthoclase feldspar or a plagioclase feldspar, depending on chemistry. Both can show aventurescence. “Sunstone” applies to the gem’s appearance.

SAPPHIRE

The name “sapphire” can also apply to any corundum that’s not ruby, another corundum variety.

The Facts

Depending on their trace element content, sapphire varieties of the mineral corundum might be blue, yellow, green, orange, pink, purple or even show a six-rayed star if cut as a cabochon.

Ruby

Ruby is the most valuable variety of the corundum mineral species, which also includes sapphire.

 

The Facts

Traces of chromium give this red variety of the mineral corundum its rich color. Long valued by humans of many cultures. In ancient Sanskrit, ruby was called ratnaraj, or “king of precious stones.”

ROSE QUARTZ

Rose quartz is a quartz variety that gets its name from its delicate pink color.

The Facts

Microscopic mineral inclusions cause the pink color and translucence of rose quartz. Well shaped, transparent pink quartz crystals are rare.

PERIDOT

Found in lava, meteorites, and deep in the earth’s mantle, yellow-green peridot is the extreme gem.

The Facts

Yellow-green gem variety of the mineral olivine. Found as nodules in volcanic rock, occasionally as crystals lining veins in mountains of Myanmar and Pakistan, and occasionally inside meteorites.

PEARL

Perfect shining spheres. Lustrous baroque forms. Seductive strands, warm to the touch. Pearls are simply and purely organic.

The Facts

Produced in the bodies of marine and freshwater mollusks naturally or cultured by people with great care. Lustrous, smooth, subtly-colored pearls are jewelry staples, especially as strands.

OPAL

Fireworks. Jellyfish. Galaxies. Lightning. Opal’s shifting play of kaleidoscopic colors is unlike any other gem.

The Facts

Opal’s microscopic arrays of stacked silica spheres diffract light into a blaze of flashing colors. An opal’s color range and pattern help determine its value.

MORGANITE

Morganite is the pink to orange-pink variety of beryl, a mineral that includes emerald and aquamarine.

The Facts

Like its cousins emerald and aquamarine, morganite is a variety of the beryl mineral species. This gem gets its subtle blush when a trace amount of manganese makes its way into morganite’s crystal structure.

Moonstone

A ghostly sheen moves under the surface of this feldspar, like moonlight glowing in water.

The Facts

Feldspar prized for its billowy blue adularescence, caused by light scattering from an intergrowth of microscopic, alternating layers. Favored gem of many Art Nouveau jewelry designers.

LAPIS LAZULI

Lapis is a beautiful rock; an aggregate of several minerals, mainly lazurite, calcite, and pyrite.

The Facts

Lapis lazuli is treasured for its beautiful deep blue color. Afghanistan is considered the source of the best-quality lapis.

KUNZITE

Collectors love kunzite for its color range, from delicate pastel pink to intense violetish purple.

The Facts

Trace amounts of manganese give this pink to violet variety of spodumene its feminine glow. A relative newcomer to the gemstone stage, kunzite was only confirmed as a unique variety of spodumene in the early part of the twentieth century.

JADE

Jade is actually two separate gems: nephrite and jadeite. In China, a pierced jade disk is a symbol of heaven.

The Facts

Prized by civilizations from ancient China to the Aztecs and Mayans of Central America, jade is crafted into objects of stunning artistry.

IOLITE

According to legend, Vikings used iolite slices to reduce glare when checking the sun’s position.

The Facts

Known in the jewelry trade as iolite, this mineral is known as cordierite to geologists and mineralogists. It was named after French mineralogist Pierre Cordier.

GARNET

Garnets are a set of closely related minerals forming a group, with gemstones in almost every color.

The Facts

The garnet group of related mineral species offers gems of every hue, including fiery red pyrope, vibrant orange spessartine, and rare intense-green varieties of grossular and andradite.

EMERALD

Emerald is the bluish green to green variety of beryl, a mineral species that includes aquamarine.

The Facts

The most valued variety of beryl, emerald was once cherished by Spanish conquistadors, Inca kings, Moguls, and pharaohs. Today, fine gems come from Africa, South America, and Central Asia.

FANCY COLOR DIAMOND

Dazzling brilliance. Captivating color. The planet’s most valued gems are fancy color diamonds.

The Facts

Fine color diamonds are the most rare and costly of all gemstones. Their ranks include the world’s most famous jewel—the Hope—and the most expensive gem ever auctioned—The Graff Pink

DIAMOND

Diamonds are among nature’s most precious and beautiful creations.

The Facts

This hardest gem of all is made of just one element: carbon. It’s valued for its colorless nature and purity. Most diamonds are primeval—over a billion years old—and form deep within the earth.

CITRINE

Citrine is the transparent, pale yellow to brownish orange variety of quartz.

The Facts

Citrine’s color comes from traces of iron. It’s perhaps the most popular and frequently purchased yellow gemstone and an attractive alternative for topaz as well as for yellow sapphire.

AQUAMARINE

Named after seawater, aquamarine’s fresh watery hue is a cool plunge into a refreshing pool.

The Facts

Blue to slightly greenish-blue variety of the mineral beryl. Crystals are sometimes big enough to cut fashioned gems of more than 100 carats. Well-formed crystals might make superb mineral specimens.

AMETRINE

This transparent quartz has colors of both amethyst and citrine, and is called ametrine or amethyst-citrine.

The Facts

Ametrine, one of the rarest types of transparent quartz, combines two colors: amethyst’s purple and citrine’s orange-to-yellow, growing together in a single crystal.

AMETHYST

The essence of the color purple, amethyst is beautiful enough for crown jewels yet affordable enough for class rings.

The Facts

Purple variety of the mineral quartz, often forms large, six-sided crystals. Fine velvety-colored gems come from African and South American mines. In demand for jewelry at all price points.

AMBER

Amber is nature’s time capsule. This fossilized tree resin contains remnants of life on earth millions of years ago.

The Facts

Fossilized resin, color of the burnished sun–orange or golden brown. Amber might trap and preserve ancient life, including insects, leaves, even scorpions and occasionally lizards.

Alexandrite

Green in sunlight. Red in lamplight. Color-changing alexandrite is nature’s magic trick.

The Facts

It’s the color-change variety of the mineral, chrysoberyl. Bluish green in daylight, purplish red under incandescent light; hard and durable. Top quality examples are rare and valuable.

DIAMOND CARAT WEIGHT

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Diamond Interactive Tool

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Diamond Clarity

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DIAMOND COLOR

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