How to Cut a Cabochon Ethiopian Opal Gemstone

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • www.moregems.com - Want to learn how to cut an Ethiopian Opal Gemstone? Lapidary, Steve Moriarty, is here to walk you through his process of cutting a hydrophane Ethiopian opal cabochon. He has been cutting this particular opal material since 2012 and shares all of his tips and techniques that he has learned along the way in this comprehensive video. As a bonus, he also shows you what a faceted Ethiopian Opal looks like, too! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to see more gem cutting videos by Steve Moriarty.
    If you have any other lapidary tips & tricks that you want to share or questions that you have about our video, please leave them in the comments section!
    Looking for quality Ethiopian Opal rough to cut yourself? Check out our selection of hydrophane opal rough on our mineral website here: www.mineralmik...
    Watch more of our Gem Cutting videos here: • Faceting Gemstones: Ho...
    Not a cutter, but want a cut Ethiopian Opal gemstone? Check out Steve Moriarty's selection of cut Ethiopian Opal on our website here: www.moregems.c...
    You can also stop in and visit us in person at our shop, Moriarty's Gem Art! Located at 126 South Main Street, Crown Point, Indiana. We're in the hub of Northwest Indiana on the downtown Square.
    Video Produced and Edited by Michael Moriarty
    #Opal #Lapidary #gemstones #howto

Комментарии • 79

  • @dannywileyinthemountains
    @dannywileyinthemountains 2 года назад +12

    This was such a great video. I think it's the first I've ever seen showing the actual process of cutting and polishing an Ethiopian opal. I have been working and studying them for years. They are most interesting. Thanks for doing this video.

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +2

      Your welcome Danny

  • @rogeriosantoscosta9339
    @rogeriosantoscosta9339 2 года назад +2

    Every day you are surpassing yourself with your beautiful jewelry

  • @tjminimoto
    @tjminimoto Год назад

    Your tutorials are very helpful especially for a beginner who is only in high school

  • @Josh31287
    @Josh31287 11 месяцев назад

    This was satisfying to watch.....I'm thinking about getting into this but I don't know what all I need.....these are my favorite gems

  • @cindywhitaker2499
    @cindywhitaker2499 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful opal. I now have a better understanding of just how much material is lost in the cutting process.

  • @stevendeitrich6933
    @stevendeitrich6933 6 месяцев назад

    Absolutely Beautiful ! ! My favorite gem . You did a miracle with that piece !

  • @ROCKINWHEELERS
    @ROCKINWHEELERS 11 месяцев назад

    GORGEOUS GEM!!! OH, THE PLAY OF COLORS!!!

  • @opalonly
    @opalonly Год назад

    Thank you for this great video! I started to learn how to cut opals with the slant cabber and every input is very helpfull for me. First I thought its better to cut etheopian opal wet but seems to be a combination getting all out of the stone.

  • @phyllishorn8284
    @phyllishorn8284 Год назад

    I would love one of these beautiful opals💓Opal is my birth stone, I had a Australian opal that cracked down the center ...the stone had no play of color ( milky) THESE OPALS ARE BEAUTIFUL💓💓

  • @user-tw3ne5qd9o
    @user-tw3ne5qd9o 3 месяца назад

    Thanks For valuable informations

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  3 месяца назад

      Your welcome

  • @shahyazdi8863
    @shahyazdi8863 2 месяца назад

    thank you

  • @WandaandSteveCreations
    @WandaandSteveCreations 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing with us, 😊

  • @jamesanderson2876
    @jamesanderson2876 6 месяцев назад

    thank you for the video by the way, I am subscribed and look forward to watching a few more of your videos.

  • @user-tw3ne5qd9o
    @user-tw3ne5qd9o 3 месяца назад

    I am always in touch with nature
    Ihave some collections

  • @SHGemstone
    @SHGemstone 11 месяцев назад

    Fantastic education ❤

  • @niazkhan2081
    @niazkhan2081 Год назад

    Really pretty and great job, I appreciate.

  • @imjonkatz
    @imjonkatz 2 года назад +3

    Thanks Steve :)
    I mainly cut Ethiopian opals and it was a pleasure seeing this posted just now.
    Also; do you teach classes or do lessons?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +6

      Hi Jonathan, I only offer these videos to teach. I work full time managing my shop & cutting, so I have very little free time. There are other resources out there that do offer in person and online lapidary classes, but I do not.

    • @imjonkatz
      @imjonkatz 2 года назад +4

      @@Moregems Ah well then, thank you very much for taking the time to respond & making these great videos!

  • @travish1853
    @travish1853 2 года назад

    Many thanks for the video!

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +1

      You’re welcome! Thanks for watching

  • @goldcambodia
    @goldcambodia 6 месяцев назад

    Good father!

  • @adijanyotavares959
    @adijanyotavares959 2 года назад +1

    Hello Mr Steve Moriarty, my name is Adijanyo Tavares and i speak here from Brasil. I would really like and would be very grateful if you recorded a vídeo teaching a class on how to interpret a diagram to facet a Stone. Grateful.

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +1

      Good idea, I will consider doing this in the future! Thanks for the feedback.

    • @adijanyotavares959
      @adijanyotavares959 2 года назад

      I thank you.

  • @pkgoldopalhunting
    @pkgoldopalhunting Год назад

    nice cutting mate dident know you could facet opal

  • @Tamim.65
    @Tamim.65 2 года назад +1

    I like your work and passion for the job 👌, keep it up,

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад

      Hi! Glad you like it, thanks for watching.

  • @erinobrien8408
    @erinobrien8408 Год назад

    Excellent, excellent video sir!!! I have to ask: are your fingers made of asbestos? 😮

  • @shaqfu99
    @shaqfu99 2 года назад

    great video, wonder if you could recommend the tools used in the video and manufacturer so one can start his/her journey..thanks once again

  • @ardincakman1291
    @ardincakman1291 10 месяцев назад

    can u give me information about ur dremel machine and tools for cutting-cleaning and polish please ?

  • @facondacon7543
    @facondacon7543 Год назад

    Satisfait

  • @mozobel8465
    @mozobel8465 28 дней назад

    Hi mr Steve my name is addis

  • @carmecarrerastrelliso764
    @carmecarrerastrelliso764 Год назад

    Precioso !!

  • @ianstoneman4842
    @ianstoneman4842 2 месяца назад

    How much vibration does that cause to the hands?

  • @sriwaluyo8703
    @sriwaluyo8703 Год назад

    Bravo👍👍👍

  • @artistcg
    @artistcg Год назад

    Can you back them to save some of the material? Or will that make them appear duller?

  • @user-tw3ne5qd9o
    @user-tw3ne5qd9o 3 месяца назад

    I hunter a good collection
    Even Sky stones
    How to show you to be edentified

  • @oralburton8068
    @oralburton8068 2 года назад +1

    Do you sale the ones you don’t use? I have some that I can’t use so I break them in small pieces and use them for making rings

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад

      Yes, we have some Ethiopian Opal rough available on our crystal & mineral website here: www.mineralmike.com/collections/ethiopian-opal

  • @jamesanderson2876
    @jamesanderson2876 6 месяцев назад

    wow beautiful. Let me ask you this. I just bought a few of these Ethiopian water opals from an Arizona guy. they are wet and will ship wet. I had just planned on keeping them as specimens not really working them polishing them for finished stones. (other than just collecting a few rocks here and there this is my first time to pick up something nice like this. not into any lapidary working yet....maybe work that way. but Is it ok to just keep then in a jar of distilled water, not even dry them out? or does that affect color? like them as they are and would be content to drop them in a jar of water and keep them there if there is no harm in doing that?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  6 месяцев назад +2

      The Ethiopian opals that are sold wet are specimen only and must remain wet, so keeping them in a jar of distilled water is a good idea. If you dry them out they will craze. The Hydrophane material that we’re working in this video is a different type of opal, which is stable when it’s dry.

  • @ROCKINWHEELERS
    @ROCKINWHEELERS 11 месяцев назад

    Will it be okay to use Diamond Polish from Dai Shine for The Wello Opals? I also had the pleasure to watch a You Tube Video of you and your Son mine at a Montana Sapphire mine and cut and polished a Beautiful Sapphire, OFF COURSE YOU BROUGHT OUT THE BRILLIANCE OF THE STONE INTO A SPECTACULAR / AMAZING GEM. What is your opinion about mail ordering a Dirt Bag of Sapphire from the mine? Because we are Disabled and OUR 47yr Old SON is a Tetraplegic, so it is trying times due to our Disabilities, Medical Issues, Doctors appts- Sons Tremors / Spasms / ___. THANK YOU FOR SHARING WITH US AND THE WORLD!!! MANY BLESSINGS UPON YOU AND YOUR FAMILY!!!

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  11 месяцев назад

      Diamond can work but cerium work better. Yes to ordering bags. I know Spokane bar sells bags and the have a cutter to cut what you find.

  • @mohannadmalik5373
    @mohannadmalik5373 2 года назад +1

    Yes i think opal is not hard i lke that rainbow of colors, Q: I want to be able to locate; identify rough gemstones and extract it, what courses or certificate training do you suggest?

    • @oralburton8068
      @oralburton8068 2 года назад +2

      Hands on starting at home with cheap stones

    • @imjonkatz
      @imjonkatz 2 года назад +2

      The internet is a good place to start. After that I'd recommend finding a local geological society / rockhounding/lapidary club. After that I'd say go to a gem show. I suggest Tucson in Jan-Feb or Denver in Sept(?). If you're not in America there's international ones as well. Best of luck friend

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +2

      It depends on how in depth you want to get. The other suggestions from a couple other commenters are good places to start, but you could also look into enrolling into the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) or the Gemmoligical Association of Great Britain (Gem-A).

    • @mohannadmalik5373
      @mohannadmalik5373 2 года назад +1

      Thanks guys foe replying, i found an IGI course in Dubai. Oral burton Ive already got my hands on skme agate so i am starting my collection lol. Jonathan what a great advice thank you all

    • @imjonkatz
      @imjonkatz 2 года назад

      @@mohannadmalik5373 :D Best of luck on your journey, it's very rewarding

  • @Kerrsartisticgifts
    @Kerrsartisticgifts 9 месяцев назад

    Do you receive the opals dry or are they a little wet? I have about 50 carats of small ones that came dry and I have ordered two pieces that are 50+ grams and they are coming in a jar of water. I am wondering what is the best way to keep them?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  9 месяцев назад

      If it’s Ethiopian Opal, you want it dry. Anything wet we’ve bought from Ethiopia is unstable and must stay wet (specimen only material).

  • @tedjones1545
    @tedjones1545 Год назад

    Sir what method do you use to dry out the opal once finished cutting and polishing? Do you dry between cutting and polishing? Do you try to slow dry once finished?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  Год назад +1

      I do it all at once and let the opal air dry when finished.

  • @Kerrsartisticgifts
    @Kerrsartisticgifts Год назад

    I'm curious about hydrophane opal. Can you soak it in dyed water instead of smoking it? Could you seal it to protect it?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  Год назад +1

      I am sure you can dye it. Smoke duplicates black opal but eventually fades. No good sealer yet

  • @oralburton8068
    @oralburton8068 2 года назад +1

    Do you sale rough opal because I’m looking to buy

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад +1

      We have a few pieces available on our mineral website here: www.mineralmike.com/collections/ethiopian-opal

  • @oliviahawkes4828
    @oliviahawkes4828 Год назад

    Nice video what do you do with your cabochons ? :)

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  Год назад

      Mount them into our jewelry or sell them as loose stones. You can see our selection on www.MoreGems.com

  • @oralburton1637
    @oralburton1637 Год назад

    Are you able to smoke them to black and still see the colour?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  Год назад

      We've never smoke treated them, but have seen dyed and smoke treated opals being offered at trade shows. The play of color still shows.

  • @gemstonemalaya
    @gemstonemalaya 2 года назад

    hai tuan.saya adalah peminat aktiviti anda..
    jika saya boleh dapatkan 1 atau 2 unit opal gem
    di siaran tuan...bagaimana caranya ..tq

  • @facondacon7543
    @facondacon7543 Год назад

    I have a part of meteorit

  • @afterizaltanjung5208
    @afterizaltanjung5208 2 года назад

    Had you ever tried Indonesian's Opal sir?

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад

      I have not tried cutting Indonesian opal.

  • @peksigarudacahayanurjanaha6017
    @peksigarudacahayanurjanaha6017 2 года назад +1

    GUS HAR LEGEND THE ALMIGHTY KING OF THE STATE OF THE KINGDOM OF THE PEOPLE OF INDONESIA OR NKRI NOW THIS MONITOR OF PRECIOUS STONES

  • @johnesku8772
    @johnesku8772 10 месяцев назад +1

    Can I get your adress so that I can supply opals to you,
    Thanks.

  • @worlderrorcoins
    @worlderrorcoins 2 года назад +1

    Hello very beutiful

    • @Moregems
      @Moregems  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching! 😁

  • @abdumohammed5503
    @abdumohammed5503 2 года назад

    hi Sir I have opal, you want

  • @facondacon7543
    @facondacon7543 Год назад

    Opal

  • @Mass-jab-death-2025
    @Mass-jab-death-2025 Год назад

    Such a slow process when you don’t dopp. Would frustrate me no end.