shape
carat
color
clarity

Anyone heard of Circular Brilliant Cut? Is it OEC?

Kyclaire

Rough_Rock
Trade
Joined
Apr 20, 2009
Messages
12
Hi All,

I am recently in the market for an OEC engagement ring, and chanced upon this beautiful diamond. After looking at the GIA certificate earlier, I realized that GIA has termed the diamond a "Circular Brilliant" instead of an OEC. Does anyone knows what this mean, and if this makes the diamond less valuable?

Thank you.
 
Gia doesn't use the term oec / old european cut. I think as these became more popular they came uo with circular brilliant so these would not be judged by the same standard as round brilliants. I don't think it makes the diamond less valuable necessarily but oecs do seem to be priced differently than their modern counterparts
 
I'm pretty sure GIA does use the designation of Old European Cut. I have seen a few stones/GIA reports. There are specific requirements
that a stone must have to get the OEC designation. If a stone does not meet them (or the round brilliant definition), it gets the circular brilliant designation.

It would not make a stone less valuable IMO.
 
I'm pretty sure GIA does use the designation of Old European Cut. I have seen a few stones/GIA reports. There are specific requirements
that a stone must have to get the OEC designation. If a stone does not meet them (or the round brilliant definition), it gets the circular brilliant designation.

It would not make a stone less valuable IMO.

My bad....here is the explanation in more detail. Thanks, @tyty333 !

https://www.gia.edu/gia-news-research-round-brilliant-cut-diamond-pay

Initially, GIA allowed only one exception—the old European cut—into its cut-grading system. This accommodated the distinctive proportions of diamonds cut in this classic style. Its appearance is associated with a time that predates expectations of conformity with the appearance of the modern-day round brilliant. As a result, GIA does not apply a cut grade to diamonds cut in the old European style.

GIA identifies classic old European cuts using these criteria:
  • Table size: less than or equal to 53 percent
  • Crown angle: greater than or equal to 40 degrees
  • Lower half facet length: less than or equal to 60 percent
  • Culet size: slightly large or larger
 
Yes, GIA specifies OECs if - as tyty noted - it meets their requirements for the cut (though I’m not sure it’s known what specifically those parameters are).

ETA: I see @bludiva found/posted the GIA OEC/OEB criteria above; helpful to know! Thx!

My OEC’s GIA report:
BBD86C4E-4565-427F-BD5B-0F02F1FB4569.jpeg

If I were considering an OEC, I wouldn’t worry nor ‘mentally devalue’ the diamond if the lab report doesn’t specifically say “OEC/OEB”, as there are variations that still broadly fall into that category, in my opinion. Considering how/when some of these were cut (e.g. 100+ years ago, by hand in candlelight, etc) I don’t think it’s fair to expect them all to fit entirely into a narrow, modern-day set of criteria. Just my two cents.

Tagging @oldminer to see if he might be able to shed some light on the topic as well.
 
GIA.jpg
 
GET 3 FREE HCA RESULTS JOIN THE FORUM. ASK FOR HELP
Top