Grossularite, or lime-alumina garnet, is known in commerce as essonite, or cinnamon-stone. The color is yellow, of various shades; specific gravity 3.5 to 3.65, and hardness 6.5.

These stones are sometimes sold for jacinths, but they are softer than the jacinth, and melt easily before the blow-pipe. Essonites come principally from Ceylon, but are also found in other places.

Pyrope or Bohemian garnet is the magnesia-alumina variety, and is of a uniform dark blood-red color. This stone is found in Bohemia, and although quantities of small pieces are found, large specimens are rare, and a piece that will cut into a four- or five-carat stone is seldom met with and commands a high price.

These garnets are found at Stiefelburg by Meronitz, Triblitz, Podsedlitz, and Neupaka.

The pyrope turns black under the blow-pipe, then red again, and melts with difficulty into a black glass. With borax it melts to an emerald-green glass. The specific gravity of this garnet is 3.69 to 3.78, and hardness 7.5.

Vermeille is a name given to the orange-red almandine, Cape garnet to the bright red-yellow variety, Cape ruby to the pyrope, and American ruby to the blood-red kind found in New Mexico, Montana, and Arizona. Carbuncle is a term applied to all garnets cut with a smooth rounding top, sometimes called, after the French, cabochon.

Uwarowite or lime-chrome garnet is one of the rarest and most beautiful of the garnet group.

The color of this stone is emerald-green, hardness 7.5, and specific gravity 3.41 to 3.52. Uwarowites are found near Bissersk in the Urals of Russia, but rarely in specimens of sufficient size to cut into gems.

This garnet is heavier and harder than the true emerald.

Demantoide or Bobrowska garnet is a soft garnet, olive-green to brown and blackish-green in color, sometimes light green. It is found in the Bobrowska River in the Urals. The specific gravity is 3.85, and hardness about 6, its softness making it undesirable for many ornaments. Before the blow-pipe it fuses into a black bead.