@.520078:

(الأهلي الملكي)53
(الأهلي الملكي)53
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Region: SA
Saturday 04 July 2026 15:16:32 GMT
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shakhoof
الوزير :
هدف الارجنتين الثاني تسلل واضح مثله مثل هدف كرواتيا الملغي ضد البرتغال
2026-07-05 18:59:48
1
australia1965
(Mesopotamia) وادي الرافدين :
Please don't tire yourselves out or get fanatical about the games that are taking place. This tournament has already decided the result and the team that will take the cup is in the dark rooms. FIFA has taken its share of the money and the referees have to implement the decisions that come from FIFA. None of the referees can make any decision on their own except by referring back to those in the dark rooms who give the decision for each game, who should win and who should lose, in order to implement their agenda.
2026-07-05 07:44:21
1
shwanazad61
shwanAZAD :
2026-07-05 09:10:38
0
user7305245619154
احمد الوصابي الوصابي :
اللهم انصر مصر على الحكم في مباراتها ضد الارجنتين
2026-07-05 21:54:25
0
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Three stones to close the series (Part 4 of 4). Two yes. One pass. Mahenge spinel: yes. Extremely praised in high jewelry right now and still at a price that hasn't fully caught up to the demand behind it. The comparison to pink sapphire and ruby is the right frame: in top color, Mahenge spinel offers something genuinely competitive with both, at a price point that still represents an entry opportunity. That window will not stay open indefinitely. The appreciation case is strong and the quality of the best material from Mahenge is undeniable. Alexandrite: pass. Not because the stone isn't extraordinary. It is. Extremely rare, genuinely so, with a color change that in the finest examples is one of the most visually compelling effects in the natural gemstone world. The problem is the same structural issue that came up with black opal: matching. Different origins produce different color change behavior. Stone to stone, the shift varies enough that building a suite or a pair is nearly impossible. The buyer pool for any specific alexandrite is narrow. Resale takes time. For an investment where liquidity matters, alexandrite sits in the too-complicated category despite the genuine rarity. Padparadscha sapphire: yes, with strict conditions. The stone has to be super clean. And the color balance has to be right, which is where the complexity lives. Padparadscha sits in a narrow window between pink and orange. Some buyers want more sunrise, others want more sunset. The subjectivity in what constitutes the ideal balance makes it a harder sell than ruby or sapphire in a standard color grade. It's not the easiest stone to move. But top quality padparadscha, clean and correctly balanced, has genuine collector demand and genuine rarity. In the right stone, it belongs in the portfolio.
Three stones to close the series (Part 4 of 4). Two yes. One pass. Mahenge spinel: yes. Extremely praised in high jewelry right now and still at a price that hasn't fully caught up to the demand behind it. The comparison to pink sapphire and ruby is the right frame: in top color, Mahenge spinel offers something genuinely competitive with both, at a price point that still represents an entry opportunity. That window will not stay open indefinitely. The appreciation case is strong and the quality of the best material from Mahenge is undeniable. Alexandrite: pass. Not because the stone isn't extraordinary. It is. Extremely rare, genuinely so, with a color change that in the finest examples is one of the most visually compelling effects in the natural gemstone world. The problem is the same structural issue that came up with black opal: matching. Different origins produce different color change behavior. Stone to stone, the shift varies enough that building a suite or a pair is nearly impossible. The buyer pool for any specific alexandrite is narrow. Resale takes time. For an investment where liquidity matters, alexandrite sits in the too-complicated category despite the genuine rarity. Padparadscha sapphire: yes, with strict conditions. The stone has to be super clean. And the color balance has to be right, which is where the complexity lives. Padparadscha sits in a narrow window between pink and orange. Some buyers want more sunrise, others want more sunset. The subjectivity in what constitutes the ideal balance makes it a harder sell than ruby or sapphire in a standard color grade. It's not the easiest stone to move. But top quality padparadscha, clean and correctly balanced, has genuine collector demand and genuine rarity. In the right stone, it belongs in the portfolio.

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