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The Benitoite Butterfly, featuring 34.67 cts. of benitoite the California state gem.


A 10.01-ct. gemstone, described as the largest hiddenite ever faceted, forms the central feature of the Hiddenite Butterfly.


The Opal Butterfly brooch displays opals from Virgin Valley, Nevada
  Rare gemstones highlight butterfly brooch exhibition at Los Angeles museum


July 6, 2012


A collection of 16 butterfly brooches, created from 18K gold and featuring variety of rare colored gemstones, has gone on the display at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in the United States.

The collection was created and loaned to the museum by Buzz and Bernadine, a gem cutter and a jewelry designer who asked to be identified by only their first names. In business together for several decades, they share a love for rare gems and nature. The butterfly brooch collection is made from gemstones they have been assembling since the mid-1970s.

Among the most noteworthy of jewelry items on display is the Benitoite Butterfly, featuring 34.67 cts. of benitoite, the California state gem. According to the museum, one of the collection's owners worked at the Benitoite Gem mine in San Benito County, California, for 33 years from 1967, and is personally responsible for both mining and cutting much of the world's supply of the gem.

A 10.01-ct. green gemstone, described as the largest hiddenite ever faceted, forms the central feature of the Hiddenite Butterfly. Hiddenite is a green variety of spodumene found almost exclusively at a single site in North Carolina. The butterfly also contains rainbow feldspar from Madagascar, colorless diamonds and green tourmaline. The eyes of the butterfly are fashioned from red beryl, which can be found only in the Wah Wah mountains of Utah.

Alexandrite is the featured gemstone of two Ninja Butterfly brooches, providing both the bodies and the eyes. In one, Tanzanian purple scapolites and Madagascar blue apatites are set around a 3.58-ct. Russian alexandrite.

The Opal Butterfly brooch displays opals from Virgin Valley, Nevada. The quality of the gemstones is remarkable, because most Virgin Valley opal has very high water content, which causes the stones to crack as soon as they are removed from the ground. But the stones in this butterfly are remarkably free of cracking.

The Butterfly Brooch Collection will remain on display in the Gem and Mineral Hall for a year, starting May 1, 2012. You will find them by the entrance of the Gem Vault at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County until end of April 2013.

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