Color-Change Garnet
Pyrope-spessartite garnet with color change from blue-green or grey-blue in daylight to purple-red in incandescent light; colored by vanadium and/or chromium. Sources include Madagascar, Tanzania, and Sri Lanka. Separation from alexandrite: garnet is isotropic (SR, no blink on polariscope); alexandrite is doubly refractive (blinks distinctly).
Physical & Optical Properties
Related: Garnet Varieties
Key Differentiators
- Singly refractive (isotropic) — stays dark under polariscope; alexandrite is doubly refractive and blinks
- No pleochroism — alexandrite shows strong pleochroism in three directions
- High RI (1.740–1.765) and SG (3.65–3.80) — overlaps alexandrite but polariscope test is definitive
- Color change from blue-green/grey-blue (daylight) to purple-red (incandescent)
Natural vs. Synthetic
Synthetic color-change garnet is commercially available (Flame fusion / Verneuil (synthetic corundum simulant only; no true synthetic garnet)). Distinguishing natural from synthetic typically requires microscopic examination of internal features.
- General Note: No synthetic color-change garnet. Confirm garnet: SR (isotropic, stays dark between crossed polars or shows anomalous DR), high RI 1.740–1.765, SG 3.65–3.80. Synthetic: Synthetic color-change corundum (lab sapphire): uniaxial negative DR, RI 1.762–1.778, SG 3.99 — doubly refractive, very different SG from garnet. Synthetic alexandrite: biaxial positive DR, RI 1.746–1.755, SG 3.70–3.78 — blinks under polariscope, shows pleochroism.
GemID Pro includes a two-phase natural vs. synthetic testing protocol for Color-Change Garnet.
Start Free TrialCommon Simulants
- Alexandrite: Alexandrite: DOUBLY REFRACTIVE — blinks distinctly between crossed polars; shows strong pleochroism in three directions (red, orange, green). RI 1.746–1.755; SG 3.70–3.78; biaxial positive. Color-change garnet is SR (no blink, no pleochroism).
- Synthetic Color-Change Corundum: Uniaxial negative DR; RI 1.762–1.778; SG 3.99 — much higher SG than garnet. Blinks under polariscope. Shows pleochroism.
Commonly Confused With
Commonly confused with: Alexandrite.
Price Context
Price context is approximate. GemID is not an appraisal tool. Results are indicators, not certified valuations.
About Color-Change Garnet
Pyrope-spessartite garnet with color change from blue-green or grey-blue in daylight to purple-red in incandescent light; colored by vanadium and/or chromium. Sources include Madagascar, Tanzania, and Sri Lanka. Separation from alexandrite: garnet is isotropic (SR, no blink on polariscope); alexandrite is doubly refractive (blinks distinctly).
Identifying a color-change garnet? GemID walks through these tests in order — RI, SG, fluorescence, and more.
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