| The 4C Guide for Diamonds
Information
is one of the most important tools you
can have before you make a diamond purchase.
The four Cs: color, cut, clarity, carat
weight, can help you determine the exact
diamond you're looking for. Pair this information
with a ball-park figure of what you want
to spend and from there, you can feel secure
about getting the best value for your money.
Most of all, ask questions and don't be
intimidated. Your jeweler wants you to
be happy with what you choose, and you
deserve to get exactly what you want!
Color: Diamonds
cover the entire spectrum of colors. The majority range from a perceptible
yellow or brownish tint up to those rare diamonds described as colorless.
Colorless diamonds allow the most reflection of light and are therefore
the most desirable. Off-white diamonds absorb small amounts of light,
slightly inhibiting brilliance.
Cut: This
factor has the greatest influence on the diamond’s fire and brilliance.
A round, brilliant-cut diamond has 58 facets. When well-proportioned,
this shape best shows the stone’s brilliance because it allows the
most light to be reflected back to the observer's eye. Stones that
appear lifeless or seem dark in the center are probably poorly cut.
Clarity: Most
diamonds contain minute traces of non-crystallized carbon and internal
stress fractures. Called inclusions, most of these are not apparent
to the naked eye but can be seen in loose stones under magnification.
Flawless clarity means that no inclusions are discernible when the
diamond is examined under a 10X lens.
Carat
Weight: The term carat comes from the ancient practice of
weighing diamonds against the seeds of the carob tree. The system
was eventually standardized, and one carat was fixed at 0.2 grams.
One carat is divided into 100 points, so a quarter-carat diamond
is 25 points or 0.25 carat. Although carat is a unit of weight, not
size, the carat weight of a diamond has come to refer to particular
sizes. If properly cut, diamonds of the same weight should be about
the same size. These sizes don’t apply to other gems, however, because
their specific gravities differ from a diamond’s.
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