Cut gemstones using cabochon and faceting techniques. Covers rough assessment, orientation for optimal color and yield, dopping, cutting angles, and crown/pavilion geometry for standard brilliant cuts. Use when you have rough gemstone material to cut into a cabochon or faceted stone, planning cutting orientation for optimal colour or optical phenomena, setting up a cabbing or faceting machine, or selecting the appropriate cutting approach for a given material.
Cut gemstones from rough material using cabochon and faceting techniques, including rough assessment, orientation planning, dopping, grinding, and faceting geometry.
identify-gemstone)Evaluate the rough material before any cutting begins.
Rough Assessment Checklist:
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Factor | Assessment |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Species | Identified? (MANDATORY before cutting) |
| | Toxic dust risk? (check below) |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Fractures | Internal fractures that limit yield? |
| | Will the stone break during cutting? |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Colour zones | Where is the best colour concentrated? |
| | Can the cut centre the colour? |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Inclusions | Large inclusions that should be cut away?|
| | Silk for star stones? (orient for star) |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Size and shape | What finished shapes fit this rough? |
| | Calibrated size possible? |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Yield estimate | Approximate finished weight as % of rough|
| | Typical: 25-40% for faceting |
| | Typical: 40-60% for cabochons |
+--------------------+------------------------------------------+
SAFETY — TOXIC DUST MATERIALS:
These minerals produce hazardous dust when cut. Use wet cutting ONLY,
ensure ventilation, and wear an appropriate respirator:
- Chrysotile (asbestos serpentine) — NEVER cut dry
- Malachite — copper carbonate dust is toxic
- Cinnabar — mercury sulfide, extremely toxic
- Orpiment/Realgar — arsenic compounds
- Chrysocolla — copper silicate, moderate risk
- Tiger's eye (fibrous) — fine silica fibers
ALL stone cutting produces silica dust. Always use water cooling
and never grind or cut dry without a dust extraction system.
identify-gemstone first)Expected: A documented rough assessment with species confirmed, fractures mapped, colour zones identified, and a cutting plan formed.
On failure: If the rough has extensive fracturing, consider whether it can be stabilized (epoxy impregnation for porous material) or if the yield is too low to justify cutting. Some rough is better sold or traded as specimen material.
Determine the optimal cutting orientation for colour and phenomena.
Orientation Principles by Stone Type:
PLEOCHROIC STONES (tourmaline, sapphire, tanzanite, iolite):
- Orient the table perpendicular to the crystal axis showing
the best face-up colour
- Tourmaline: the c-axis often shows dark/opaque colour —
orient the table to view the a/b axis colour
- Sapphire: slight pleochroism — orient for deepest blue face-up
- Tanzanite: trichroic — blue/violet axis preferred for table
STAR STONES (star ruby, star sapphire):
- Silk (rutile needles) must be parallel to the base
- Cut as cabochon with the dome centred over the silk
- The star appears at 90 degrees to the silk orientation
CAT'S EYE STONES (chrysoberyl cat's eye, tiger's eye):
- Fibrous inclusions must run perpendicular to the length
of an elongated cabochon
- The eye appears as a bright line across the shortest dimension
COLOUR-ZONED MATERIAL (sapphire, ametrine, watermelon tourmaline):
- Position colour zones so they are not visible face-up
- Or feature them intentionally (ametrine, watermelon tourmaline)
Expected: A marked rough stone with the table direction, orientation, and approximate outline indicated. The cutting plan optimises colour presentation and yield.
On failure: If the best colour orientation conflicts with maximum yield, decide based on priority: colour quality almost always increases value more than additional carat weight. When in doubt, orient for colour.
Shape a gemstone into a domed cabochon on a cabbing machine.
Cabochon Cutting Sequence:
EQUIPMENT SETUP:
- Cabbing machine with water drip on all wheels
- Wheel sequence: 80, 220, 600, 1200, 3000 (or 1200 + polish)
- Dop sticks and dop wax (or cyanoacrylate adhesive)
- Safety glasses — MANDATORY
- Avoid loose clothing, tie back long hair
STEP-BY-STEP:
1. SLAB: Cut a slab 5-8mm thick through the best area
2. TEMPLATE: Mark the desired outline (oval, round, etc.)
using a template and aluminum pencil
3. TRIM: Remove excess material on the trim saw or 80-grit wheel
Cut close to the line but leave 1-2mm margin
4. DOP: Attach the slab to a dop stick with dop wax
Heat the wax, press the stone flat-side down, centre it
5. SHAPE (80 grit): Grind to the template outline
Work all the way around, maintaining symmetry
6. DOME (220 grit): Shape the dome profile
Standard dome height = ~1/3 of the stone's width
Keep the dome symmetrical — check from all angles
7. SMOOTH (600 grit): Remove 220-grit scratches
Work systematically, keeping even pressure
8. PRE-POLISH (1200 grit): Remove 600-grit scratches
The surface should feel smooth to the fingernail
9. FLAT BOTTOM: Remove the stone from the dop, re-dop
face-down, and grind the bottom flat on 220 → 600 grit
10. POLISH: See polish-gemstone skill for final finishing
Expected: A smoothly domed cabochon ready for final polishing, with symmetrical outline, even dome height, and no visible scratches from the 1200-grit stage.
On failure: If the dome has flat spots or asymmetry, return to 220 grit and reshape. Better to lose a little material than to polish an uneven dome. If the stone comes off the dop during grinding, re-dop carefully and continue — check the stone for chips first.
Cut precise geometric facets using a faceting machine.
Standard Round Brilliant Angles (quartz-family, RI ~1.54):
+------------------+-------+--------+
| Facet | Angle | Index |
+------------------+-------+--------+
| Crown main | 42° | 96-index: 3,9,15,21,27,33,39,45 |
| Crown break | 25° | (bisect mains) |
| Crown star | 15° | (bisect breaks toward table) |
| Table | 0° | flat |
| Pavilion main | 43° | 96-index: 3,9,15,21,27,33,39,45 |
| Pavilion break | Use GemCad or published diagrams |
+------------------+-------+--------+
Standard Round Brilliant Angles (corundum, RI ~1.76):
+------------------+-------+
| Facet | Angle |
+------------------+-------+
| Crown main | 37° |
| Pavilion main | 41° |
+------------------+-------+
CRITICAL: Pavilion angles determine brilliance.
- Too shallow → light leaks through bottom ("windowing")
- Too steep → dark extinction zones
- Correct angle → total internal reflection (brilliance)
polish-gemstone for lap and compound selection)Expected: A faceted gemstone with precise meets (where facet edges converge to a single point), consistent facet sizes, good symmetry, and proper angles for the material's RI.
On failure: If facet meets are off, the angles or index settings are slightly wrong. Re-check the published diagram. "Chasing meets" (adjusting one facet to fix another) compounds errors — it is better to re-cut the tier if the error is large. Small meet errors are normal for beginners and do not significantly affect brilliance.
Evaluate the cut stone before proceeding to final polish.
Expected: A fully cut stone that meets quality standards for symmetry, meets, and surface preparation, ready for the polishing stage.
On failure: If significant defects are found (poor symmetry, bad meets, incorrect proportions), it is more time-efficient to re-cut now than to polish a defective stone and re-cut later. Document what went wrong for the next stone.
identify-gemstone — Species identification is required before cutting beginspolish-gemstone — The next step after cutting, covering lap selection, compound choice, and final finish