Good evening!
Let me introduce myself--I have a big birthday up this year in April, and it's time to upgrade with some bling
. I was so fortunate to find this site, and I have read through so many tutorials and threads to try and educate myself on diamonds. Let me start by thanking all the numerous long term members who tirelessly answer questions and help us newbies.
This seems like a journey, and here is where I am at so far:
The first decision I had to make was lab or earth mined. Before I knew much about lab diamonds, I was eyeing an earth mined Costco 3 ct three diamond ring (1.5 ct center stone, .75 side stones). Then, I discovered lab diamonds and this site. I have an earth mined engagement ring , etc., so I did a little soul searching, and in the end, if I can get the same look and "performance" out of a lab diamond that I can out of an earth mined diamond for a significant cost savings, I am good with it. Also, with two kids in college at the same time, and the fact I can get much more diamond for my money, it seems like a no brainer! Lab diamonds it is!
Once I decided on Lab stone(s), I figured I needed to decide on the cut. The truth is, I really like several cuts--cushions and radiants are my first choices, then rounds. And I want this to be sparkly--oh hell, I've waited a long time for this, blinding would be fine with me--I'd be fine if I could signal airplanes with it
. It seems that from what I have read on this site, round brilliants have the most "sparkle", cut is the most important thing, and dialing in a better cut diamond is a little more clearer with a round brilliant than another cut (unless of course you find a cushion, for lack of more technical terms, cut like a cushion). So I have decided to work with round brilliants.
Which brings me to where I am now--since this will likely be a right hand ring, whether I attempt to put together three rounds (which seems like quite an ordeal to do--what sizes, what ratios, etc.), or do I go with one nice "stunner" in a nice setting as a right hand ring?
Just a few other things to throw out:
--my existing earth mined ring is a 1 ct vvs D. I personally cannot see color until frankly it is the color of ginger ale. But what we found when looking for engagement rings 27 years ago is that my husband can see color. I mean like so much so that one diamond place we went to thought he was pulling their leg that he could see it, so they put fifteen Ds, Es, and Fs on the table and challenged my husband to sort them. Without hesitation he pulled out the D's, separated the E's and then the Fs. They told my soon to be husband he was in the wrong business
. So out of respect for him, I would like to stay in the true D or E range.
---I haven't had my finger measured in a long while, that's up next, but I would guess, based on my engagement ring being a 4 3/4, that I am currently around a 5-5 1/2
---I don't have a set budget yet, but I think somewhere between 8-10k, but that is "negotiable".
---if I go single stone, I would like to get something substantial. Not necessarily all the way to Ring Pop size, but my motto is "go big or go home"--so I would love some suggestions on size. We live in an area that will not have diamonds of this size to try, so I'm going to need to crowdsource this
So to make a long story short, has anyone put together a three stone lab diamond ring? How did you do it, and would you mind sharing pics? I'm a little concerned that it may be too complicated to try and pull together; and frankly, I think if I found the right setting, a single stone (maybe with side stones?) would work too.
Last question: I haven't figured out how the buying the diamond versus making the ring works. I see the sites that folks buy diamonds from (loose grown diamond, ritani, etc). These however, don't seem to be where they get their settings. For settings, I have seen several names thrown out here: Alex Park, Caysie, David somebody? that often make settings for Pricescope members. I have also seen that places like Grown Brilliance, etc. are not the place to get settings; and places like Leon Mege are very expensive (and he really doesn't say nice things about Pricescope on his website so I wouldn't use him anyway). Any tips on how to go about doing this and your favorite designers in platinum would also be appreciated--again, I won't have a local jeweler to use.
Whew!! Sorry to overwhelm you with details and questions!! I appreciate your time and guidance!
Now, I am trying to decide whether to
Let me introduce myself--I have a big birthday up this year in April, and it's time to upgrade with some bling
This seems like a journey, and here is where I am at so far:
The first decision I had to make was lab or earth mined. Before I knew much about lab diamonds, I was eyeing an earth mined Costco 3 ct three diamond ring (1.5 ct center stone, .75 side stones). Then, I discovered lab diamonds and this site. I have an earth mined engagement ring , etc., so I did a little soul searching, and in the end, if I can get the same look and "performance" out of a lab diamond that I can out of an earth mined diamond for a significant cost savings, I am good with it. Also, with two kids in college at the same time, and the fact I can get much more diamond for my money, it seems like a no brainer! Lab diamonds it is!
Once I decided on Lab stone(s), I figured I needed to decide on the cut. The truth is, I really like several cuts--cushions and radiants are my first choices, then rounds. And I want this to be sparkly--oh hell, I've waited a long time for this, blinding would be fine with me--I'd be fine if I could signal airplanes with it

Which brings me to where I am now--since this will likely be a right hand ring, whether I attempt to put together three rounds (which seems like quite an ordeal to do--what sizes, what ratios, etc.), or do I go with one nice "stunner" in a nice setting as a right hand ring?
Just a few other things to throw out:
--my existing earth mined ring is a 1 ct vvs D. I personally cannot see color until frankly it is the color of ginger ale. But what we found when looking for engagement rings 27 years ago is that my husband can see color. I mean like so much so that one diamond place we went to thought he was pulling their leg that he could see it, so they put fifteen Ds, Es, and Fs on the table and challenged my husband to sort them. Without hesitation he pulled out the D's, separated the E's and then the Fs. They told my soon to be husband he was in the wrong business

---I haven't had my finger measured in a long while, that's up next, but I would guess, based on my engagement ring being a 4 3/4, that I am currently around a 5-5 1/2
---I don't have a set budget yet, but I think somewhere between 8-10k, but that is "negotiable".
---if I go single stone, I would like to get something substantial. Not necessarily all the way to Ring Pop size, but my motto is "go big or go home"--so I would love some suggestions on size. We live in an area that will not have diamonds of this size to try, so I'm going to need to crowdsource this
So to make a long story short, has anyone put together a three stone lab diamond ring? How did you do it, and would you mind sharing pics? I'm a little concerned that it may be too complicated to try and pull together; and frankly, I think if I found the right setting, a single stone (maybe with side stones?) would work too.
Last question: I haven't figured out how the buying the diamond versus making the ring works. I see the sites that folks buy diamonds from (loose grown diamond, ritani, etc). These however, don't seem to be where they get their settings. For settings, I have seen several names thrown out here: Alex Park, Caysie, David somebody? that often make settings for Pricescope members. I have also seen that places like Grown Brilliance, etc. are not the place to get settings; and places like Leon Mege are very expensive (and he really doesn't say nice things about Pricescope on his website so I wouldn't use him anyway). Any tips on how to go about doing this and your favorite designers in platinum would also be appreciated--again, I won't have a local jeweler to use.
Whew!! Sorry to overwhelm you with details and questions!! I appreciate your time and guidance!
Now, I am trying to decide whether to