Lpsl
Rough_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2022
- Messages
- 100
Reconciling perfection: perfect vs perfect-for-us…l
How do you all reconcile the endless availability of diamond perfection (and perhaps perfectionism) with the beautiful-yet perhaps not supermodel-perfect diamonds in your life?
I mean- there are supermodels, and there are endless depths of unique, non-super ideal beauty in the world. The human part of this is easy- most of us are not nor do we care about or strive to be supermodels. Unique and humane and good and kind are goals.
I am struggling a bit when it comes to diamonds. We *can* have perfection if we want it and know how to find it- at pretty much any price point. Perfection is accessible to those in the know.
How do you find your peace with your [diamond] piece(s) - in their uniquely beautiful and special-to-you imperfection?
I love love love the community here- transparency, respect, generous (selfless?) sharing of wit, wonder, and wisdom, guiding us all toward the best diamond value for our hard-earned dollars.
Like many here, I found PriceScope too late to inform the big purchase of our natural mined stone and engagement ring.
Like many here, we naively thought GIA ideal meant ideal - and that the playing field (shopping field) was level. We knew nothing of steep deeps, fluorescence, sub-optimal proportions, or how to judge the nuances of light performance.
We knew nothing of ASET scopes or other light performance images. The Whiteflash website was so over the top - disturbingly flashy and overwhelming to newbies, compared to the more approachable BN and JA.
Our first diamond was a dog. In trying to figure out why, I learned *a little bit* after stumbling on DiamDB… enough to understand that our ‘ideal’ cut D-color VVS1 diamond was a steep-deep with fluorescence that did make it very milky in natural sunlight.
We exchanged for a different stone, which we have to this day. I used some proportion ranges in selection this time, yet still knew nothing off the sweet spots for table percentage, crown angle or pavilion angle alone, let alone the importance of different combinations of these. We knew nothing of super-ideals —- I mean wasn’t ideal supposed to be exactly that?
My husband is an engineer who -had he known- would have wound up with WF ACA or Jann Paul Decagon- the most perfect of perfect within our budget.
Yet we didn’t know. I have learned more and opted against tormenting him with this info. We are past the engagement, new diamond, and newlywed stage (well, relatively: our second anniversary is coming up this winter). We’ve moved way past thinking about diamonds…. eixcept for the time I spend here- reading more, learning more, gaping at all the super-ideal and/or antique beauty of PSers jewels.
We all understand that there will always be a bigger better, more perfect stone. My question for folks in this forum is… how do you stop the madness for yourselves and love what you have?
My stone is 1.51, GIA Ideal/ Ex/Ex. Color I, VVS2. She is a sparkler that draws attention wherever we go. She falls within GIA Excellent and AGS 0 range in that color-coded overlap grid on HCA. She does not have ideal proportions- she’s HCA 3.7 and “probably sparkles and looks a good size for her carat weight” [ she does, on both counts], with very good light return and very good spread.
She has been with us through a COVID romance and marriage, transcontinental relocation, new homes and old and new friends, and an amazing life we could not have imagined before March 2020.
I stare at her often and am finding my peace in loving our uniquely beautiful yet imperfect stone.
[fair warning, I am also a longtime TPFer, which is where I discovered PriceScope. There’s more than a little overlap between these communities.]
I am interested in your stories and your journeys! How do you all find your peace?
How do you all reconcile the endless availability of diamond perfection (and perhaps perfectionism) with the beautiful-yet perhaps not supermodel-perfect diamonds in your life?
I mean- there are supermodels, and there are endless depths of unique, non-super ideal beauty in the world. The human part of this is easy- most of us are not nor do we care about or strive to be supermodels. Unique and humane and good and kind are goals.
I am struggling a bit when it comes to diamonds. We *can* have perfection if we want it and know how to find it- at pretty much any price point. Perfection is accessible to those in the know.
How do you find your peace with your [diamond] piece(s) - in their uniquely beautiful and special-to-you imperfection?
I love love love the community here- transparency, respect, generous (selfless?) sharing of wit, wonder, and wisdom, guiding us all toward the best diamond value for our hard-earned dollars.
Like many here, I found PriceScope too late to inform the big purchase of our natural mined stone and engagement ring.
Like many here, we naively thought GIA ideal meant ideal - and that the playing field (shopping field) was level. We knew nothing of steep deeps, fluorescence, sub-optimal proportions, or how to judge the nuances of light performance.
We knew nothing of ASET scopes or other light performance images. The Whiteflash website was so over the top - disturbingly flashy and overwhelming to newbies, compared to the more approachable BN and JA.
Our first diamond was a dog. In trying to figure out why, I learned *a little bit* after stumbling on DiamDB… enough to understand that our ‘ideal’ cut D-color VVS1 diamond was a steep-deep with fluorescence that did make it very milky in natural sunlight.
We exchanged for a different stone, which we have to this day. I used some proportion ranges in selection this time, yet still knew nothing off the sweet spots for table percentage, crown angle or pavilion angle alone, let alone the importance of different combinations of these. We knew nothing of super-ideals —- I mean wasn’t ideal supposed to be exactly that?
My husband is an engineer who -had he known- would have wound up with WF ACA or Jann Paul Decagon- the most perfect of perfect within our budget.
Yet we didn’t know. I have learned more and opted against tormenting him with this info. We are past the engagement, new diamond, and newlywed stage (well, relatively: our second anniversary is coming up this winter). We’ve moved way past thinking about diamonds…. eixcept for the time I spend here- reading more, learning more, gaping at all the super-ideal and/or antique beauty of PSers jewels.
We all understand that there will always be a bigger better, more perfect stone. My question for folks in this forum is… how do you stop the madness for yourselves and love what you have?
My stone is 1.51, GIA Ideal/ Ex/Ex. Color I, VVS2. She is a sparkler that draws attention wherever we go. She falls within GIA Excellent and AGS 0 range in that color-coded overlap grid on HCA. She does not have ideal proportions- she’s HCA 3.7 and “probably sparkles and looks a good size for her carat weight” [ she does, on both counts], with very good light return and very good spread.
She has been with us through a COVID romance and marriage, transcontinental relocation, new homes and old and new friends, and an amazing life we could not have imagined before March 2020.
I stare at her often and am finding my peace in loving our uniquely beautiful yet imperfect stone.
[fair warning, I am also a longtime TPFer, which is where I discovered PriceScope. There’s more than a little overlap between these communities.]
I am interested in your stories and your journeys! How do you all find your peace?