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Why Diamond Cut Might Be The Most Important C
When the time comes to buy an engagement ring, you have a lot of things to thing about. What shape diamond are you going to buy? What type of band do you want? Are you interested in gold or platinum? Do you want a solitaire ring or one with pave or perhaps halo diamonds? Yes, there are lots of things to think about, but one thing you are probably not thinking about that you should think about is the cut of the diamond.
Diamond cut is one of the four cs of diamonds. The other three are color, carat, and clarity. Cut is one of if not the most important of the cs in some people's opinion. Cut is often forgotten especially in comparison to carat. Every body seems to want or at least think about a big carat diamond, so carat is the 'c' that is most well know. This article explains why cut is just as if not more important
The cut of the diamond directly relates to how sparkly the diamond appears. Take it from me, every woman wants as sparkly a diamond as possible. Sparkle is how much light the facets of the diamond reflects back up and out. While different types of light, like sunlight vs track lighting, also impact the sparkle, the biggest determining factor of sparkle is the cut of the diamond. If a diamond is cut too shallow, then light will reflect at a bad angle. If a diamond is cut with an irregular facet shape, then the diamond will not reflect the maximum amount of light.
High end jewelers like Tiffany and company or Cartier only offer excellent cut diamonds or what they may call 'triple excellent diamonds'. While excellent cut diamonds are great and have excellent sparkle, they tend to be very, very expensive. Jewelers also only typically cut a diamond to an excellent cut if it has few inclusions and is an E, F, or G color, meaning it has no yellow in the diamond, which also increasing the price of the stone.
Other options for cut are poor cut, fair cut, good cut and very good cut. You probably should not buy a fair cut diamond, and most jewelry stores in the United States won't even offer poor cut diamonds. Even though it will be cheaper the cut just is not good enough to be worth the cost of the diamond. Talk to you jeweler about cuts, and learn about how the specific diamond you are looking to purchase reflects light. That way, it will sparkle as much as possible.
When the time comes to buy an engagement ring, you have a lot of things to thing about. What shape diamond are you going to buy? What type of band do you want? Are you interested in gold or platinum? Do you want a solitaire ring or one with pave or perhaps halo diamonds? Yes, there are lots of things to think about, but one thing you are probably not thinking about that you should think about is the cut of the diamond.
Diamond cut is one of the four cs of diamonds. The other three are color, carat, and clarity. Cut is one of if not the most important of the cs in some people's opinion. Cut is often forgotten especially in comparison to carat. Every body seems to want or at least think about a big carat diamond, so carat is the 'c' that is most well know. This article explains why cut is just as if not more important
The cut of the diamond directly relates to how sparkly the diamond appears. Take it from me, every woman wants as sparkly a diamond as possible. Sparkle is how much light the facets of the diamond reflects back up and out. While different types of light, like sunlight vs track lighting, also impact the sparkle, the biggest determining factor of sparkle is the cut of the diamond. If a diamond is cut too shallow, then light will reflect at a bad angle. If a diamond is cut with an irregular facet shape, then the diamond will not reflect the maximum amount of light.
High end jewelers like Tiffany and company or Cartier only offer excellent cut diamonds or what they may call 'triple excellent diamonds'. While excellent cut diamonds are great and have excellent sparkle, they tend to be very, very expensive. Jewelers also only typically cut a diamond to an excellent cut if it has few inclusions and is an E, F, or G color, meaning it has no yellow in the diamond, which also increasing the price of the stone.
Other options for cut are poor cut, fair cut, good cut and very good cut. You probably should not buy a fair cut diamond, and most jewelry stores in the United States won't even offer poor cut diamonds. Even though it will be cheaper the cut just is not good enough to be worth the cost of the diamond. Talk to you jeweler about cuts, and learn about how the specific diamond you are looking to purchase reflects light. That way, it will sparkle as much as possible.