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- Sep 20, 2008
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Well, maybe without the pink secondary, they would be violet or blue. Pure fancy violet does exist, Leibish had one once, and it sold. They wanted to buy it back. Most violet have grey modifier, and this one did not. Purple is actually a combination of red and blue, so without the red or pink, it would be a more blue or violet color.
ETA: Per Liebish's website article.
"Pure fancy purple diamonds are very rare and hard to find. These colored diamonds are divided into two main categories: violet diamonds, which lean towards the blue-grey spectrum; and purple diamonds, whose hues are reddish pink."
"Purple diamonds often occur with modifying secondary overtones, as a pure purple diamond is very rare to find. In terms of face-up appearance, these secondary colors often make the diamond that much more beautiful, even if it is less rare. "
http://www.leibish.com/natural-purple-diamonds-article-121
In the middle of the page, Leibish calls this one Fancy deep purple. I assume the GIA report was that color???
http://www.leibish.com/media/mediabank/fancy-purple_725.41ae3.jpg
ETA: Per Liebish's website article.
"Pure fancy purple diamonds are very rare and hard to find. These colored diamonds are divided into two main categories: violet diamonds, which lean towards the blue-grey spectrum; and purple diamonds, whose hues are reddish pink."
"Purple diamonds often occur with modifying secondary overtones, as a pure purple diamond is very rare to find. In terms of face-up appearance, these secondary colors often make the diamond that much more beautiful, even if it is less rare. "
http://www.leibish.com/natural-purple-diamonds-article-121
In the middle of the page, Leibish calls this one Fancy deep purple. I assume the GIA report was that color???
http://www.leibish.com/media/mediabank/fancy-purple_725.41ae3.jpg