Sourced from producing regions around the world and concentrated in the 0.5–3ct sizes the trade uses most — with calibrated goods and larger singles available alongside. All natural and earth-mined, all imaged in 360°, all with disclosed treatment status. This page describes what we supply; the live stocklist shows what's available today.
Blue sapphire is the core of our inventory. We carry material from across the major origins, selected for the qualities the trade prizes — bright, transparent tone, strong brilliance, and the soft velvety quality imparted by fine rutile silk in metamorphic stones.
We carry the full tonal range: pale ice blues suited to fashion lines, classic medium cornflower concentrated in the most commercially demanded 0.5–3ct sizes, and saturated royal blue in larger singles. For greenish-blue stones, see teal sapphire below.
Unheated material is a specialty. A meaningful share of our blue inventory carries no treatment — bought as rough, cut in-house, and available for laboratory certification before purchase on request.
Pink sapphire ranges from delicate pastel pinks through to intensely saturated stones approaching ruby territory, and origins differ in character — some run toward purer pink hues with less orange modification, others warmer. We select for the hue a buyer needs, a distinction that matters to designers matching stones across a collection.
Pink sapphire demand has grown steadily in bridal and fashion jewellery, and consistency is the recurring challenge for buyers. Because we sort from rough, we can supply matched pairs and suites with consistent hue and saturation — something that's difficult to assemble from mixed-source inventory.
The padparadscha — named for the Sinhalese word for the lotus blossom — is arguably the most misunderstood sapphire in the trade. True padparadscha shows a delicate balance of pink and orange; stones that lean too far in either direction trade as fancy pink or orange sapphire at meaningfully different price levels.
Because the definition is contested between laboratories, we describe our padparadscha-territory stones precisely and recommend certification from GRS, AGL, or Gübelin before purchase for any stone being sold to an end client as padparadscha. We will arrange this for you prior to invoicing.
Supply is genuinely scarce. When fine material enters our inventory, it tends to move quickly — buyers with specific padparadscha requirements should tell us what they need so we can flag stones as they arrive.
Yellow sapphire spans pale lemon through saturated golden orange, with the finest stones showing pure yellow without brown or green modification. Demand is strong both from Western designers and from the South Asian market, where unheated yellow sapphire carries particular significance.
For the astrological trade specifically: we stock certified unheated yellow sapphires and can supply documentation suitable for clients who require untreated material.
Teal sapphire — sitting between blue and green — has become one of the most sought-after colours in contemporary bridal design. The finest stones balance blue and green in roughly equal measure, often with a vivid peacock quality and natural colour zoning that makes each stone individual.
Most teal material reaching the market is unheated, and we stock it that way. Because the zoning is part of the appeal, our 360° imaging lets you see exactly how the blue and green sit before you commit.
Green sapphire ranges from soft mint through deep forest and olive tones. Long overlooked, it has found a steady following among designers wanting an alternative to emerald — with sapphire's superior durability and clarity and none of the typical fracture-filling.
Most green sapphire is naturally coloured and frequently unheated. We carry it across the tonal range, with cleaner, brighter material concentrated in the commercial sizes.
Orange sapphire spans bright mandarin tones through warm amber, distinct from padparadscha in that it carries little to no pink. Vivid, saturated orange free of brown is genuinely scarce and commands strong demand from designers.
We sort orange stones carefully from material that borders padparadscha territory, and describe hue precisely so a stone sold as orange isn't mistaken for — or priced as — padparadscha.
Peach sapphire — soft, warm pinkish-orange in pastel saturation — has surged in popularity for engagement rings, prized for its gentle, romantic tone. It shares padparadscha's pink-orange character at lower saturation and a far more accessible price.
Consistency matters most here, since peach is often set in suites and matched designs. Sorting from rough lets us assemble stones of even tone across a collection.
Brown sapphire spans warm cognac and champagne tones through deep chocolate, often with golden or reddish undertones. Long treated as an afterthought, earthy brown has found genuine demand among designers working in autumnal and vintage-inspired palettes — and it offers fine, durable colour at accessible prices.
Most brown material is naturally coloured and frequently unheated. We carry it across the tonal range, with cleaner, more transparent stones concentrated in the commercial sizes and suited to matched suites.
Purple sapphire runs from light lilac through saturated royal purple and into reddish grape tones. Strongly coloured purple is uncommon in fine quality and offers a distinctive, jewel-toned alternative to amethyst with sapphire's hardness and brilliance.
Many purple sapphires also show a subtle shift in tone under different lighting, and our 360° imaging captures the effect so you can read each stone accurately before you buy.
Violet sapphire leans toward blue where purple leans toward red — a cooler, more blue-tinged colour that ranges from pale lavender to deep saturated violet. Lavender pastels in particular have become a favourite for delicate, contemporary settings.
We separate violet from purple deliberately, since the distinction matters to designers matching a palette. Our imaging shows the precise hue under daylight, so there are no surprises on arrival.
Parti sapphires display two or more distinct colours within a single stone — most often blue, green and yellow — divided by natural colour zoning. No two are alike. Most reach the market unheated, which keeps the zoning crisp, but parti material can be heated — we disclose the treatment status of every stone.
Demand from Australian and contemporary designers has made parti material a category of its own. Because the appeal is entirely in how the zones sit, our 360° imaging is essential — you evaluate the exact pattern before you buy.
Beyond defined parti zoning, sapphire occurs in genuinely multi-coloured stones — several hues present in a single gem, sometimes sharply zoned, sometimes softly blended. This is where collectors and adventurous designers find one-of-a-kind stones.
Our stocklist flags multi-coloured and zoned stones as filterable attributes, and our 360° imaging captures the full play of colour so you can judge each stone before committing.
Grey sapphire has become a quiet favourite for modern, understated designs — a neutral, metallic tone that sits between silver and slate, often with subtle blue, green or violet undertones. It pairs naturally with both white and yellow metals.
We supply grey in clean, even-toned single stones and calibrated goods, with every stone imaged in 360° so you can read its exact undertone before you buy.
White — or colourless — sapphire is the most understated member of the family: bright, durable, and increasingly chosen as a natural, untreated alternative to diamond and as a melee accent stone. The finest material is clean and free of any grey or yellow tint.
We supply white sapphire as single stones and as calibrated, colour-matched melee for pavé and accent work, sorted in-house for consistent whiteness across a parcel.
For manufacturers and volume buyers, we assemble parcels to specification: calibrated rounds in standard millimetre sizes, colour-matched melee for pavé work, and mixed lots for production lines. Because sorting happens in-house from rough, parcel consistency is controlled at the source rather than assembled from broker stock.
Parcel enquiries are handled directly — tell us the sizes, colour grade, treatment requirement, and quantity, and we will quote against current availability or source to order.
Heat treatment is the oldest and most widely accepted enhancement in the sapphire trade — the majority of sapphires sold worldwide are heated, and a heated sapphire honestly disclosed is a perfectly legitimate stone at its price level. The problem in the market is not heat; it is silence about heat.
Every stone we supply is natural and earth-mined — we never deal in synthetic or lab-grown sapphires. Every stone in our stocklist also carries an explicit treatment status: None, Heat Only, or Unknown. We do not stock material with more invasive treatments — no beryllium diffusion, no glass filling, no irradiation. Where a stone's history cannot be established with confidence, we say "Unknown" rather than guess in our own favour.
Unheated premium, verified. Any stone we describe as unheated can be sent for laboratory verification before you commit to purchase. If a lab disagrees with our assessment, the sale doesn't proceed on unheated terms. That policy has cost us sales — and earned us buyers who return for a decade.