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The angle formed by the bezel facets and the girdle plane
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The separation of the white light into spectral colors
An optical property- the difference between the RI values of specific violet and red wavelengths of visible light for a given material.
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cutting style thats developed, named and promoted by a specific manufacturer |
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The brightness created by the combination of all the white light reflections from the surface and the inside of a polished diamond |
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cutting style with trainglar or kite shaped facets that radiate from the center toward the girdle |
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the collective term for inclusions and blemishes |
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top part of the gem above the girdle |
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Small facet at the bottom of a finished gem
If no culet AGS: Pointed
GIA: None |
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The narrow section of a finished gem that forms the boundary between the crown and the pavilion and functions as the gems setting edge. |
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How well a gemstone resists SCRATCHES and ABRASION |
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Clarity characteristic totally enclosed in a polished gemstone or extending into it from the surface |
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rough gem material suitable for the use in tools, drills, abrasives and other indusrial applications. |
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A unit of measure for the fineness of gold |
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the international unit of measurement for gem weight. One carat equals 1/5th of a gram (.200g) |
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cut that combines brilliant-cut and step cut styles |
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ranking of the relative hardness of 10 minerals |
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rough gem materialthat requires substantially more processing that gem-quality rough to produce a polished gem suitable for use in jewelry |
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lower part of a faceted gem below the girdle |
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One hundredth of a carat (.01ct) |
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The flashes of light you see when the diamond, the light or the observer moves |
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a round brilliant cut stone with 57 or 58 facets. Often called a full cut. |
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a cutting syle that features long, narrow facets in rows (usually 3) parallel to the girdle on both the crown and pavilion. |
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Damage caused by sudden extreme temperature changes |
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How well a gemstone resists breaking and chipping |
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features uses to judge the quality and value of all gemstones |
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A collective term for diamond CLEAVAGES and FRACTURES |
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Treatment that involves injecting molten glass substance into a diamonds surface-reaching feathers or laser drill holes |
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Describes a diamond that might have surface blemished, but shows no inclusions at 10x |
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A general term for included stones |
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Part of the rough crystals origional surface left on a fashioned diamond |
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A flawless diamond may have what characteristic? |
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Extra facets on the Pavilion not visible face up |
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The 5 factors which determine the overall effect of a clarity characteristic are: |
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Size; Number; Position; Nature and Relief |
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Characteristics are enslosed within a gemstone. They may begin at the surface and move inward. |
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Define: Clarity range VVS |
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Diamonds which contain minute inclusions that are difficult for an experienced grader to see under 10x |
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When a diamond shows no inclusions under 10x by an experienced grader |
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When a diamond shows no inclusions or blemishes under 10x by an experienced grader. |
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Define: Inclusion "Bearded Girdle" |
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(BG) Tiny feathers extending in from the girdle, created during the bruting process |
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Define: Inclusion "Bruise" |
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(Br) tiny opening or hole accompanied by tiny, root-like feathers |
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Define: Inclusion "Cavity" |
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(Cv) an opening or hole created when a crystal is pullled out, or when a feather breaks away |
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Define: Inclusion "Cloud" |
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(Cld) a hazy or milky area made up of a number of very small inclusions grouped together |
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Define: Inclusion "Feather" |
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(Ftr) a separation or break that reaches the surface, and is often white and feathery or shiny in appearance. |
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Define: Inclusion "Grain Center" |
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(GrCnt) a small area of concentrated crystal structure distortion, usually with a pinpoint-like or thread like appearance |
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Define: Inclustion "Included crystal" |
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(Xtl)a mineral crystal enclosed within a diamond |
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Define: Inclusion "Indented natural" |
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(IndN) a natural that dips below the finished diamonds surface |
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Define: Inclusion "Internal graining" |
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(IntGr) internal indications of irregular crystal growth; may appear like faint lines or streaks agains a transparent background, or may appear milky, colored or reflective. |
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Define: Inclusion "Internal laser Drilling" |
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(no abv.) laser drilling within a diamond that doesent reach the surfact; not plotted |
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Define: Inclustion "Laser drill hole" |
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(LDH) a tiny tube made by a laser; the surface opening might resemble a pit, while the tube might resemble a needle |
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Define: Inclusion "Needle" |
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(Ndl)a long, thin included crystal that looks like a tiny rod |
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(Pp) a very small included crystal, normally seen under 10x as a tiny dot, either singly or in groups or strings |
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(Abr) a series of tiny nicks along facet junctions, producting white fuzzy lines instead of sharp facet edges |
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(EF) a facet placed without regard for symmerty and not required by the cutting style. |
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(no abv) wavy or bumpy area on the surface of a polished diamond |
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(N) part of the orgional surface of rough diamonds surface that remains on the polished stone |
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(PL) fine parallel groves an ridges left on a gems facet as a result of the polishing process |
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(PM) whitish film on the surface of a facet caused by excessive heat during polishing. |
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(RG) a grainy or pitted girdle surface, often with nicks |
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(S) a linear indentation normally seen as a fine white line, curved or straight, with no apparent depth. |
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Define: Blemish "Surface Graining" |
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(SGr) Surface indication of structural irregularity; might appear as a groved or wavy surface; might cross facet junctions |
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A gemstone heating process that can be used alone or to stabilize irradiated color |
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Define: Color Characteristic |
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The basic color of a fancy colored gemstone |
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The combination ot TONE and SATURATION that determines how noticiable the color is. |
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Define: Fancy colored diamonds |
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Naturally colored yellow and brown diamonds that exhibit color beyone the Z range, or that exhibit any othe color face up. |
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The emission of visible light by a material when its exposed to ultraviolet radiation |
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Your first impression of a color; the basic color of an object |
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A treatment that changes the clolor of a gem by exposing it to radioactive materials |
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A set of color comparision diamonds that defines GIA's diamond color grades in the normal (D-Z) range |
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A general term for diamonds in the G-to-J color range |
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A colors strength or intensity, ranging from a dull hue to a pure, vivid hue |
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A colors degree of darkness or lightness |
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Each letter grade in the GIA color scal represents? |
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The top grade of the NORMAL GIA color range is? |
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The most common color of fluorescencs in gem quality diamond is? |
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Which of the following grades has the most yellow? D, G, I, H |
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The most commonly encountered colors amoung fancy colored diamonds are? |
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Which masterstone does GIA Gem Trade Lab use to determine if a natural yellow diamonds qualifies as a fancy yellow? |
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The color grade a light yellow or brown diamond, graders compair it to a masterstone for? |
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The annealing of irradiated diamonds to stabilize their color is done by? |
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The combination of tone and saturation that determines how noticable a color is, is know as? |
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When mounted, G,H and I diamonds can look? |
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The more rare colored diamonds are? |
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Irradiated diamonds might change color when exposed to? |
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Most consumers can easliy see color beyond the color grade? |
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The star facets are where the arrow heads come from and the lower girdle halves are where the arrow shafts come from when viewing a Hearts and arrows image. On diamonds with ideal optical symmetry, the optics emitted through the star facets have a direct correlation to lower girdle facet length. So in that sense the star facets are dependent upon that other measurement. When dealing with Ideal cut diamonds you can have a range for both the star facets and lower halves that will give you great performance, there isn’t one magic number or combination.
In our A CUT ABOVE group we personally allow a range of 48-55% in the star facets and a range of 76-80% in the lower halves as we find these to give best result in overall consistent light return. Though it’s not to say that there can’t be great performing diamonds that fall just outside that range, ultimately it’s going to be the performance images (ASET, Idealscope, Hearts) that show you the stones true performance, so I like to think of the star facet as just a detail of a diamond. |
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Depending on the type of treatment the diamond has, it's not always stable over time. Meaning, the way your diamond looks today may not be the way it looks in 10 years from now, if the treatment is not stable. Also, its important to understand that even though treatments may change the appearance of the diamond to the eye, the inclusions and clarity characteristics are still there, some of which *may* cause durability issues with the diamond. Enhancing the apparent clarity of a diamond does not actually improve its clarity grade per the lab. |
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Faceting pattern refers to the type of cuts within a stone. Each "side" of the diamond is a facet. The size and position of the facets impact the way the light is returned to the eye, and the overall sparkle pattern you see. |
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What causes fluorescence in diamonds? |
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UV light reacting to trace amounts of Boron in the diamond. |
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fancy shape color grading |
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Graders usually base a fancy cut’s color grade on the amount of color they see in the pavilion in the diagonal direction. That’s because color can be more concentrated in the lengthwise direction and less concentrated at the stone’s width. Variations in cut might cause the color of faint yellow or darker diamonds to weaken when they’re viewed through the pavilion, so graders also check color in the face-up position. If the color looks darker than it did when the stone was face-down, they adjust the grade, but never by more than one full grade. |
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- The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” Meaning that the overall look of a fancy cut is often much more important than the specific details that would be vital to a round brilliant.
- 3 different cuts: Brilliant, Step, Mixed
§ -Brilliant: Triangular and kite shaped facets that radiate from a gem’s center toward its girdle.
§ -Step: Long, narrow, four-sided facets arranged in rows that are parallel to the girdle on both the crown and pavilion.
§ -Mixed: Have either brilliant-cut crowns and step-cut pavilions or brilliant-cut pavilions and step-cut crowns
- To be well proportioned, a gem’s pavilion should be about 2.5 to 4.5 times the depth of its crown.
- Bow-Tie: Common in shallow or very deep stones, while slightly deep pavilions can eliminate it. The bow-tie darkens as the difference between a diamond’s length and width increases and pavilion angle variations become more extreme.
- Pavilion Bulge: Brilliants have mains that run straight from girdle to culet, so pavilion bulge isn’t a factor for them. Step cuts, on the other hand, have concentric rows of pavilion facets, making a certain amount of pavilion bulge inevitable. Cutters will sometimes cut the top row of pavilion facets wide and set them at a very steep angle. This creates a pronounced bulge. It can save weight, but it doesn’t increase the stone’s face-up size. It also increases unplanned light leakage. The stone doesn’t look any bigger but it does add to the carat weight and cost. In a step cut, bulge doesn’t affect a stone’s value unless there’s more bulge than necessary for the stone shape.
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The flashes of color you see in a polished diamond |
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the appearance of a material’s surface in reflected light. |
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The flashes of light and the contrasting dark areas you see when the diamond, the light, or the observer moves. |
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Change in speed and possible change in direction of light as it travels from one material to another. |
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A measure of the change in the speed and angle of light as it passes from one material to another. |
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parts per 1,000 are pure gold (41.7%) |
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= 585 parts per 1,000 are pure gold (58.5%) |
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18k = 750 parts per 1,000 are pure gold (75%) (White- Zinc, Copper, Nickel) (Yellow-Zinc and Copper) |
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950 =950 parts per 1,000 pure platinum (95%) (Iridium) |
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Rougher feel, texture wise, a bit harder than Iridium. |
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