I am so excited. On
February 2nd, I am leaving for my first Tucson show ever. I will be there for the entire week, working
part time and shopping part time, making new connections and getting a better
sense of availability and pricing of gems.
For those of you who don’t know that much about Tucson, it
is the largest gem show of the world. It takes place once a year, from mid-late
January to mid-late February. Actually
Tucson isn’t one show, but consists of approximately 40 different shows, all
taking place in various hotels and convention centers. There are gem shows, bead shows, mineral and
fossil shows and more, some are wholesale only, others are open to the public. Some of the hotel shows are actually taking
place in the hotel rooms themselves, so the dealers display their wares during
the day and they sleep in the same room at night. Someone told me this tradition arose because
so many dealers would sell out of their rooms at night, or before and after the
shows. Therefore it made sense to just
sell out of the rooms, period.
Here’s a link to the Tucson gem shows taking place this
February: http://www.tucsongemshows.net/coming.html
The show I’ll mainly be attending is the AGTA Gemfair. That is one of the largest, maybe the largest
show; it takes place at a convention center, and it is wholesale only. I got free tickets because I am working for
two days for my favorite gem dealer, Prima Gems, and then roaming around the
rest of the time. My friend Jochen
Hintze from Jentsch Mineralien will also be exhibiting but at one of the
mineral shows, so I will look in on that as well. I doubt I’ll be able to go to all 40 shows
though, lol.
A lot of gem dealers actually go to Tucson a few days before
their show and make wholesale appointments to sell out of their hotel rooms, so
it is said that many important trades and deals happen before any of the shows
start. I’m not big enough to participate
in this, but I may nevertheless benefit through my gem dealer friends.
Budgeting is very important when you go to Tucson. People spend hundreds of thousands of dollars
there, and I have nowhere near that kind of cash. I have to decide on a number, and I have to
be very careful. I have trained myself
to be willing to walk away from a good deal and think about it first, and of
course I can ask people I know there for advice before purchase. Thanks to the survey I just ran, I have some
ideas about what you guys are interested in, but more suggestions are
welcome.
You may see a gem sale in my shop around the time I am gone,
which Debbie will manage (she will also manage my kitties while and house sit
my wares). That sale will allow me to
raise some more money if I see interesting stuff.
Here’s the AGTA exhibitor list, as you can tell, there are a
few hundred there, and that’s just
gems.
What will I buy? In a
way, I don’t know. One thing about these
shows is that you need to be open minded.
When I go to the JA Show in NY, which has maybe 20-30 gem dealers, I go
with a list, I meet my regular sellers, and then I just look around for
deals. I will do some of that in Tuscon
also, but additionally I will want to find some unusual and rare stuff. Unheated Ceylon sapphires are something I always chase after. They are in my mind among the best long term
gem investments that one can make. Even
low heat sapphires are ok, so long as there’s no other treatment, and of course
the best color is blue, then purple or bi-color or purplish blue. A nice star sapphire cab might be good, and
of course, if I had the money, the bigger the better. Meaning like 2-3 carats (if I have to buy I
top out at that price range). Mahenge
spinels are another good investment, or Burma spinels, but I already have the
source for the former. The latter are
hard to find. The rest is just, well,
whatever turns up. Tsavorites are a bit
dark for my taste, and I do have a source there as well. So I will probably focus on Ceylon sapphire
and Burma spinel, and then see what else is out there. Someone mentioned I should look for Paraiba
tourmalines, the problem with those is that you cannot determine origin on the
spot, and many sellers price Afghan or African material very high so you don’t
know what you’re getting unless you go straight to a lab. For stuff like that, it is best to clear the
source with other gem dealers, get references, and then make a more cautious
purchase – insofar as that’s possible with Paraibas given the price.
I will keep you posted and will try to take some little
videos for you that I’ll put on Facebook.
African Tourmaline Rough (from which my unheated Tourmalines are cut) |
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