- Joined
- Jan 11, 2006
- Messages
- 58,575
dianabarbara|1361306702|3384604 said:alright, another couple of pictures
I love these! Reminds me so much of Dreamer's gorgeous setting!
dianabarbara|1361306702|3384604 said:alright, another couple of pictures
diamondseeker2006|1361308153|3384637 said:dianabarbara|1361303963|3384538 said:done!
by the way, your earrings are to die for!!!!![]()
I am afraid you sent the file to the owner of the earrings! I was trying to warn you that that was not my listing! My listing is on the same page below that and says "1.58 G VS1 GIA XXX..."!
But it will be better if you can post it here for everyone!
Chrono|1361308946|3384657 said:I cannot make anything out. Can't see which facet lights up and which one doesn't.
Circe|1361312005|3384723 said:I stopped by there a little while ago and saw it in the case and under the regular store lighting. [...] you can hit ME through my LoupeTroop listing, too (I think I'm the only one with a locket up right now, which should make me easy to find).
Dreamer_D|1361312636|3384737 said:Buy that pic8 pic9 stone, assuming you can work out a fair price and appropriate return period. That video is poor, but it is enough to show me that its worth pursuing in combination with the photos. The pictures show the faceting clearly enough for me to tell (to my satisfaction) that the stone will look amazing. The video shows me a few things that confirm my beliefs -- like no dead center, a uniform look of light return (although lame in the video). And the mount is amazing. I adore that style. A mount like that is impossible to find these days, people do not know how to make them anymore and if they can they will cost $4k+. So, as a wearer of an octagonal style prong set bezel, I can tell you its worth a hefty sum to get one! Oh, and Circe is not exaggerationg on the size boost. My diamond looks exactly like Demelzas in person (set in a solitaire), and my stone is half a carat smaller!
Proof of the power of a bezel style mount:
And yes I worked in another chance to post a photo of my ring
ETA: Regaring ASET, I do think it correlates very well with actual physical apprearance of stones, which is the only reason I use my eyes to inspect the actual appearance of stones insteadBut I will say that it took me a year or more of study to train my eyes to be able to see cut quality in an old cut the way an ASET might, so for people newer to old cuts an ASET is a wonderful tool.
Dreamer_D|1361313155|3384747 said:For edumacational purposes, I wanted to add that these three images, below, are all I would require to judge the cut on this stone as superb.
The left image is a real test, zoomed in and straight on. This image would reveal any red flags like obstruction, lazy under-table facets, leakage or poor optical symmetry. But instead it reveals wonderful patterning and no signs of any of the baddies.
The middle image shoes a moderate crown height which is desired to me in this make of old cut, and a very small table, I wager mid-40%. These are ideal.
The right image shows that the stone has great edge to edge brightness and a pleasing bold pattern.
Depending on price and other practical factors, I would buy this diamond based on these images. In a heartbeat.
ETA: To be clear, by "practical considerations" I mean: trusted vendor and buyer protections, return period, comfort with possibility of returning the diamond, and any other protective factors you require to buy. My opinion is based only of the cut of the stone, no other considerations, and I am not liable for the outcome of this if you pursue it in any way![]()
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Dreamer_D|1361396523|3385625 said:Although its a good place to begin by using MRBs as a comparison, it does not tell the whole story.
If you kept looking for a better price you would most likely not get a GIA report. You would not get videos (such as they were). You would likely not get clear photos. You might have to negotiate a price adjustmet post-hoc to compensate for inflated color/clarity ratings like I did.
If you keep looking for a better price you will be very very very hard pressed to find a GIA I color OEC in that size through most secondary sources. They just don't exist. Large OECs are rare. Near colorless are rarer still. And by rare I mean, you might see one per year come up on ebay (the only way for a better price IMO, compared to estate pricing like you are looking at here).
Then there is cut. That type of cut -- if it is indeed as lovely as I think it is -- is super rare. So multiple the cut rarity by the color rarity... you get my point, right?
And if you love that setting, that's worth something too, above the base price, since you cannot replicate those and finding a true antique that fits your stone is very hard.
So, to me, the price is fair. If you want a screaming deal, though, you will have to invest the time and energy to find it, and have good luck too. I don't think that is possible from Europe. Shipping makes it all too complex.
Finding a deal is not eveyrthing. Finding what you want for a fair price, that is what really matters.