- Joined
- Sep 20, 2008
- Messages
- 25,226
To me, there are three main groups of gem collectors. Some of these groups overlap, but this is what I have perceived at a very high level.
1) Fine color is a must irregardless of cut.
2) Precision cutting is a must, irregardless of the quality of saturation
3) Precision cutting and fine color are a must
Add in a billion other variables to the above (hue, tone, treatment, clarity, gem species, size, etc. . . ), and you get the idea of the complexity of colored gem collecting. The fact of the matter is that collecting colored gems is so complex a subject, that we can discuss cutting all day long, and people will always find no rhyme or reason with the discussions. Colorless diamonds are by far, a much less complex subject, and just a subset of a single gem species.
1) Fine color is a must irregardless of cut.
2) Precision cutting is a must, irregardless of the quality of saturation
3) Precision cutting and fine color are a must
Add in a billion other variables to the above (hue, tone, treatment, clarity, gem species, size, etc. . . ), and you get the idea of the complexity of colored gem collecting. The fact of the matter is that collecting colored gems is so complex a subject, that we can discuss cutting all day long, and people will always find no rhyme or reason with the discussions. Colorless diamonds are by far, a much less complex subject, and just a subset of a single gem species.