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variety and size of the stones. Not only does cutting reduce the stone in size, but the cost of cutting must be taken into consideration. The latter may represent almost the entire value of stones the raw material of which is abundant and cheap, as is true of many of the varieties of quartz. In the case of diamonds the cost of cutting adds about 50% to their value.
The price of gems, besides varying with quality and species, is de­pendent like that of other commodities upon supply and demand, which are in turn affected by discoveries of new sources, and by changes of fashion. Thus the discoveries of diamonds in Brazil and South Africa respectively caused a fall in the prices of this gem at each of these periods because of the increased supply afforded. In 1750, just before the influx of Brazilian diamonds into Europe, one-carat stones were valued at $40. Shortly after, when the supply from Brazil poured into the market, they fell to a value of only $5. In 1791 this price had risen to $30. This fell again to $20 during the French wars of 1848, but by 1865 had risen to nearly $100, which is not far from the present price. At the present time the emerald has reached an unprecedented price, because while the demand is steady the supply has almost entirely failed. On the other hand, the sapphire has fallen about 25% in value in the last twenty years on account of the discovery of new fields. In some cases, however, the failure of supply of a little-used gem may cause the demand for it to cease, as has happened with the Italian diopside.
The price of the four gems, diamond, ruby, sapphire, and emerald, is on the whole little influenced by changes of fashion, for they seem to be always in demand. Most of the other gems, however, vary in price with the fashion, being at one time much in vogue and again almost for­gotten. Thus topaz is now little prized, but Kunz states that the mines of this gem in Spain have been bought and are being held by a French company in anticipation of a return of the stone to fashion. This might cause a demand for it equal to that of forty years ago, when it brought from $4 to $8 per carat.
As gems are objects of luxury, and not of necessity, the demand for them is greater, and hence their price is higher, in times of prosperity. Vice versa in hard times, or periods of financial depression, prices of gems fall. The period following the French Revolution witnessed a great lowering of the prices of gems, partly because the previous extrava­gances of the French court in this direction had been one of the sources of popular discontent, and partly because of the general financial depres­sion. At the present time in the United States the magnitude of the gem trade is greater than ever before.
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