The word “ruby” or “turquoise” on a price tag at a gem show often refers to something the trade calls a composite, and the difference between that and a natural stone is enormous. A composite gem can be 50 percent or more filler material, with the gemstone serving as a structural framework rather than the dominant substance. These products are legal to sell, but only with clear disclosure, and disclosure is exactly what tends to disappear at certain markets and online listings.
What composite actually means
Composite gems are stones whose fractures, voids, or porosity have been infused with another material to improve appearance and stability. Lead glass-filled rubies are the most notorious example. Low-grade corundum, often otherwise unsalable, is heated with lead glass that flows into the cracks, leaving a finished stone that looks like a fine ruby to the unaided eye. Composite turquoise typically involves chalk or low-grade turquoise stabilized with epoxy or polymer resins, sometimes dyed for color enhancement. Reconstituted stones go further, grinding fragments and binding them with adhesive into shapes that are then cut as gems. The Federal Trade Commission’s Jewelry Guides require that all of this be disclosed at the point of sale, but enforcement is uneven and most consumers wouldn’t know what to ask.
How to spot the tells
Composite stones often have telltale visual features under magnification. Lead glass-filled rubies show gas bubbles trapped in the filler, blue or orange flash effects when tilted under light, and characteristic fractures that look filled rather than open. Composite turquoise often appears too uniformly colored, with a slightly plastic surface luster that differs from natural stone. Price is the loudest signal. A natural untreated ruby of any meaningful size is rare and expensive; a “ruby” ring selling for under a few hundred dollars at a gem show is almost always heavily treated, composite, or synthetic. Reputable dealers will state treatment status in writing and use industry-standard disclosure language. Anyone who refuses to put the description on the receipt is telling you something.
Why this matters beyond the purchase
Composite gems are not just cheaper natural gems; they’re different products with different properties. Lead glass-filled rubies can be damaged by ordinary jewelry repair operations because heat and acidic cleaners attack the filler. Routine resizing of a ring can crack or cloud the stone. Composite turquoise often loses color or stability over time, particularly with exposure to oils, sunlight, and chemicals. Insurance appraisals and resale values are also dramatically lower for composite material, often a small fraction of what an undisclosed buyer paid. The product can be a perfectly reasonable purchase at the right price with full disclosure. It becomes a problem when sold as something it isn’t.
The bottom line
Composites and reconstituted stones occupy a legitimate niche in the jewelry market for buyers who want the look at a fraction of natural-stone prices and understand what they’re getting. The deception happens when disclosure goes missing. Demand written treatment and composition statements on every colored stone purchase, ask whether any filler or stabilization has been used, and walk away from sellers who get evasive. The information you need is standardized and short. Sellers who hide it are choosing to.
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