07/05/2026
“I’ll pay you $10,000 if it’s glass and not tourmaline. You up?”
See, calling something “fake” on the internet is easy. Anyone with no identity can comment “glass” or “scam” and disappear.
But real conversations? Real testing? Real accountability? That’s different.
We’ve been in this industry for 40+ years. I’ve personally spent around 10 years working with gemstones every single day. If we were scammers, we wouldn’t openly show our faces, educate people publicly, and invite lab testing on camera.
And about the “glass” comment, we have no issue clearly mentioning treatments. If something is treated, synthetic, glass-filled, or anything else, we say it openly. Transparency keeps businesses alive for decades.
In fact, I prefer showing flaws first instead of hiding them. Because when customers buy online, they’re buying on trust. I’d rather underpromise and let the product exceed expectations than oversell and disappoint.
So criticism is fine. Healthy skepticism is important.
But random accusations without knowledge or accountability? Different thing entirely.
And the offer still stands.
If anyone genuinely believes it’s glass and not tourmaline, let’s meet, get it lab tested together, document everything publicly, and post the results.