CINNAMON GLOW
There is a warmth to hessonite garnet that no other stone quite replicates. Deep amber, burnt orange and rich red all present in the same gem, shifting with the light like something lit from within.
Cinnamon Glow is built around two matched hessonite garnets totalling 7.65 carats, set in 14 karat yellow gold that draws out every warm tone the stones carry. Surrounding each gem is a halo of 38 VS1 brilliant diamonds totalling 0.93 carats in E colour, their cool white fire creating a contrast that makes the amber of the hessonite burn even brighter.
A stone that rewards the people who discover it. Hessonite garnet is rarely the first choice, but it is almost always the one people come back to.
Cinnamon Glow is presented in an original Orloff of Denmark jewelry box.
ONE OF A KIND.
ORLOFF OF DENMARK.
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About Garnet
Garnet is one of the oldest and most misunderstood gemstone families in the world. Most people think of it as red. The reality is far more interesting. Garnet occurs in virtually every colour except blue, and the range of varieties within the family produces some of the most exceptional stones available to collectors today.
Demantoid, the rarest of the garnets, produces a green with a dispersion higher than diamond, and the finest examples come from Russia and Namibia.
Tsavorite, the intense green garnet from Kenya and Tanzania, rivals emerald in colour and surpasses it in clarity but falls short in recognition.
Spessartite brings a vivid orange that few other stones can match. The exceptionally vivid spessartines usually gain the trade-name Mandarin Garnet.
Hessonite, sometimes called the cinnamon stone, carries a warm reddish orange that deepens under incandescent light in a way that is entirely its own.
Rhodolite sits between red and violet, a colour so unique that it exists almost nowhere else in the gem world.
The highly coveted Malaia garnet from Tanzania and Kenya shifts between orange and pink depending on the light.
And colour change garnet, one of the most extraordinary phenomena in gemology, appears green in daylight and shifts to red under incandescent light.
What unites all of them is a hardness, a brilliance,
and a natural honesty that the garnet family has always been known for.
These are not stones that need assistance to show their best. They simply are what they are.
