spinel after recutting - recutting gemsspinel after recutting - recutting gems

How it Works: Recutting Gems to Maximize Value


Recutting gems that have been poorly cut can increase their value significantly. See how precision custom cutting can transform a gem.

6 Minute Read

In other articles, we've discussed how custom cutting from rough can make a big difference in a gem's optical performance. We've also covered how recutting diamonds and colored stones can help repair damage to gems. Now, we'll demonstrate how a skilled lapidary with proper equipment can take an average or even below-average poorly cut gemstone, whether native or commercially cut, and make it into something truly special, compelling, and valuable. Longtime International Gem Society (IGS) member Daniel Stair will show us how recutting gems works. Starting with a commercially cut mixed oval 5.24-ct spinel, he'll walk us through the process.
Spinel Before Re-Cut
5.24-ct spinel before recutting. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

A Standard Cut Gone Wrong

Gem cutters use the standard mixed cut for most all gem shapes. It consists of a step-cut bottom (pavilion) and a brilliant-cut top (crown). Step cutting is done using rectangular or square-shaped facets. Brilliant cutting is done using triangular, diamond, and/or kite-shaped facets.

Look at the spinel in the photo above. It's a prime example of some great gem material poorly cut.

The Facetron

I'll recut this gem using a Facetron faceting machine, probably the most popular faceting machine for custom gem cutting. Look at the photo below as I describe its features.

  • To the upper left, you'll find a water tank that drips water coolant onto the spinning lap (cutting or polishing disc) below. This flushes away debris during cutting and helps to keep the gemstone cool.
  • Below the tank, I've placed a polishing lap. It sits inside a silicone dish designed to stop water and debris from flying all over the cutter, wall, etc. The dish has a drain hose connected to a container that catches all the water, etc.
  • To the right, you can see a mast that holds the faceting machine head. The head is used to control angle, rotation, and depth of each facet as it's cut.
  • You can adjust the angle on the right using the silver hand crank. The little window next to the crank displays the angle.
  • The rotation of the arm is adjusted using an index gear. It's divisible by the number of sides of the finished stone. You can see the gear at the top of the arm, just below the dial gauge for controlling facet depth.
  • Front and right, you can see the on/off switch and the dial for adjusting the lap's rotation speed.
Facetron
Facetron faceting machine. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Preparing the Gem

Before recutting gems, wipe them off with an alcohol swab. This will remove all traces of oil present on the surfaces.

Wiping Stone
Wiping off the stone with alcohol. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Next, attach your stone to a flat-ended dop stick keyed to fit into the end of the faceting machine's arm. To do this:

  • Heat up the brass dop using an alcohol burner.
  • Wipe off the old wax.
  • Put the dop into a block of new wax and get a nice gob of melted wax stuck to the end of the hot dop stick.
  • Stick your stone on the melted wax end of the dop stick.

This will hold it in place during cutting and polishing.

Heating the Dop
Heating the dop. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.
Wax going onto the dop
Wax going onto the dop. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Use a transfer jig with a cone dop to help line up the stone on the dop. Make sure it's nicely centered. This will minimize the loss of face-up size and carat weight during recutting. This may be the most important step in the whole process. You may need a number of tries before getting the stone perfectly centered.

Stone situated on the dop
Stone situated on the dop. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Next, plug the dop holding the stone into the end of the faceting machine arm. Then, lock the dop in place with the key shown in the lower front of the photo.

Dop is on the facetron
Dop is on the Facetron. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Recutting Gems: The Pavilion

Now, we can start cutting (grinding flat spots, actually) using a diamond impregnated disc or lap. First, establish its shape by cutting the edges, also known as the girdle.

Cutting the side - recutting gems
Recutting the girdle. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

In this case, we'll convert the oval to a more brilliant, modern custom cushion emerald design.

Although it's hard to see, the stone now has flat edges where the curved girdle used to be. In the photo, they appear a bit lighter in color than the polished surfaces.

Flat edges on the girdle - recutting gems
Flat edges on the girdle. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Cutting the Bottom Without Instructions

Once you establish the girdle and shape, cut the bottom of the stone. You'll often use a diagram for this step when cutting a stone. However, in this case, we won't use instructions, since we're recutting the stone. We're trying to fit the new design into the existing stone's shape.

First, cut the facets around the stone to establish a point on the bottom.

Point on the bottom - recutting gems
Point on the bottom. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Next, cut break facets around the bottom edge of the girdle so the stone will sit flat in a setting. (I also added eight little facets to the point on the bottom to increase the sparkle of the finished gem).

Break facets - recutting gems
Break facets. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Polishing the Bottom

Polishing is the last part of cutting the bottom. In this case, our gem first receives a rough polish using 8K diamond. Then, it gets a final polishing using 100K super-fine diamond powder and a bit of oil.

Polishing the pavilion - recutting gems
Polishing the pavilion. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

In this photo, you can see the partly polished bottom. That helps to reveal the design a bit

Partly polished pavilion - recutting gems
Partly polished pavilion. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Recutting Gems: Transferring the Stone

Once you've completely polished the stone's pavilion, remove the dop holding the stone from the faceting machine arm. Then, place the dop in the fixed end of the transfer jig. Note that the bracket on the left isn't fixed. It slides on the two black rails.

Transfer jig - recutting gems
Transfer jig. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Next, repeat the process of getting wax on the end of a dop using the alcohol burner. In this case, use the dop with a cone-shaped receptacle at one end.

Once the wax is on the end, put the dop into the sliding end of the transfer jig, pressed up against the newly cut pavilion of our stone. This will make an impression in the wax. Then, put a tiny drop of super glue in the wax impression. This will ensure that the dop sticks well to the stone.

Super glue in the wax impression - recutting gems
Super glue in the wax impression. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Next, slide the receiving dop into place against the stone.

Now, take a 10-minute break while the super glue has a chance to dry.

After that, hold the dop on the right over the flame. Heat it just enough to carefully soften the wax so it can be removed. This leaves us with a dop holding the stone ready to have the crown cut. This completes the transfer.

Transferring the stone
Transferring the stone. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Recutting Gems: The Crown

Take that dop and plug it into the end of the faceting machine arm, just like the last one. Now, we can start cutting a design for the top, or crown, of the stone.

Stone crown - recutting gems
Stone crown. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Once you cut that crown design, you'll polish it using the same process you used for the pavilion. However, the difference here is we'll next need to cut a new table or flat spot on the stone's top.

Stone table - recutting gems
Stone table. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

To cut the table, remove the dop stick from the machine arm. Replace the arm with a special 45 or 90° dop holder, the big metal block shown below. Then, plug the dop into the bottom of that block. This allows you to cut the table on the top of the stone.

90° dop holder - recutting gems
90° dop holder. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

After cutting and polishing the table, remove the dop. You've completed the recut of the spinel. All you need to do now is heat the dop to soften the wax, remove the stone, and clean the dop wax and super glue off the bottom. Unfortunately, the dop wax makes the stone look black through most of the cutting process. So, you don't really know what it will look like until the reveal at the very end.

Stone with dop wax after cutting - recutting gems
Stone with dop wax after cutting. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Recutting Gems: Revealing the New Cut

And there we have it! We now have a spinel much more beautiful in person. It went from 5.24 cts to 4.09 cts. However, usually very little of the face-up size is lost when doing a total recut to a similar shape. Most of the weight loss comes from removing the "belly" on the bottom of the stone. (Commercial cutters use this "belly" to keep the stone heavy, since stones sell by carat weight).

This stone is almost completely eye-clean in person. Do you see that inclusion on the side of the stone? It's actually a tiny zircon crystal inside the spinel!

spinel after recutting
Spinel after recutting. © Dan Stair Custom Gemstones. Used with permission.

Before and After Videos

See how the stone performs before and after recutting in the following videos.


Spinel Before Being Recut by Daniel Stair, from Ganoksin and IGS on Vimeo.

Spinel After Spinel After Being Recut by Daniel Stair, from Ganoksin and IGS on Vimeo.


Daniel Stair

Gemstone cutter at customgemstones.com.

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