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Author Topic: Moroccan Fakes  (Read 4047 times)

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Sifu

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Moroccan Fakes
« on: May 12, 2016, 12:54:31 PM »

There is a bustling business in Fez, and maybe some other Moroccan cities, of selling fake minerals to tourists. My Dad bought this around 2010 for $70, having been told it was an amythest geode. In fact, it's just plain quartz crystals which have been dyed/painted. I have to admit though, it's pretty awesome to have a genuine fake in my collection. :)
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lithicbeads

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #1 on: May 12, 2016, 06:18:20 PM »

Any time you want to add to your fakes collection buy a candy colored " jade" cab on ebay. We have a good thing going when  we can trust our stone suppliers.
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bobby1

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #2 on: May 12, 2016, 07:08:46 PM »

You definitely want to have a real fake in your collection rather than a fake fake.
My wife checks carefully when she buys flowers. She looks real closely to ensure that they are real plastic flowers, not the fake plastic ones you see all the time!
Bob
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Jhon P

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #3 on: May 12, 2016, 09:05:09 PM »

 :LOLOL:  Bob you got me there, I know that I am tired but it took a couple of minute thinking about fake plastic flowers.      :icon_thumleft: they still look good. There is some other fake things I have enjoyed looking at. 
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James D. Farrow

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #4 on: May 13, 2016, 02:56:53 AM »

I like real genuine imitation leather.

James
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James D. Farrow
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada

"No More Trains Will Be Sold Once The Magazine Leaves The Station"

ToTheSummit

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #5 on: May 13, 2016, 04:49:35 PM »

I like real genuine imitation leather.
Mmmmmmm...pleather!
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55fossil

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #6 on: May 15, 2016, 09:40:06 AM »

Okay, that is funny, but????  Is turquoise (etc) that has been smashed, heated and glued together Fake, Genuine, or ?????  I am not against simulated or lab grown, just like to know what I am buying. I now wonder how many fakes I own and it is now stuck it in my head like a bad tune.
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jakesrocks

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #7 on: May 15, 2016, 10:07:10 AM »

Not all fakes are from Morocco. Chinese turquoise is for the most part howellite which has been dyed. Morocco & China are well known for fake and/or reconstructed fossils. But that isn't saying that all fossils from these countries are fake.

Here is a fake, or at least partially fake fossil from Morocco. The matrix this trilobite sits on is made up of epoxy and local sand. The trilobite itself has been constructed from at least two similar trilobites, with colored epoxy used to fill in any gaps. The Moroccans are getting very good at creating fossils from scrap pieces, and have even fooled a couple of museums. Strong magnification will reveal tiny air bubbles in the epoxy used. And a needle heated to red hot and pressed into the matrix will give off the smell of burning plastic.

I bought this "fossil", knowing that it was a fake to use as an example to teach people with.

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rocks2dust

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #8 on: May 15, 2016, 12:54:17 PM »

Okay, that is funny, but????  Is turquoise (etc) that has been smashed, heated and glued together Fake, Genuine, or ?????  I am not against simulated or lab grown, just like to know what I am buying. I now wonder how many fakes I own and it is now stuck it in my head like a bad tune.
Although marketed as "Block Turquoise" some of it contains no turquoise at all (they'll crush whatever soft stone they have at hand). It is more properly a man-made simulant. Even if there is some turquoise chalk in it, it is a manufactured substance with its hardness, color and other attributes artificial in origin. Not a "gem" material, and pretty much worthless (or worth slightly less than the recycle value of the plastic resin and bit of copper salt colorant that goes into it, assuming it's not toxic waste requiring an added fee to send to the dump), as it can be cranked out in whatever quantity anyone cares to order. Useful for "costume jewelry" and I also own some fakes for reference.
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Enchantra

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Re: Moroccan Fakes
« Reply #9 on: May 15, 2016, 11:11:34 PM »

Okay, that is funny, but????  Is turquoise (etc) that has been smashed, heated and glued together Fake, Genuine, or ?????  I am not against simulated or lab grown, just like to know what I am buying. I now wonder how many fakes I own and it is now stuck it in my head like a bad tune.

I call that dyed, stabilized turquoise.  If it has a huge plastic content it's just reconstituted block which is manmade.
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