Exactly.
At $2/carat price point... what difference does it make, especially since they look same.
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Diamonds are valuable because they are expensive.
The look isn't the thing.
A diamond is a pretty boring gem, really. And the more perfect, the more boring. Until you get to the ridiculously large, all a diamond has going for it is the message "somebody spent a pile of money on me". At $2.00/carat, glass is more romantic. This from a guy who's ring has a stone on it he can't identify, that he found in the sand in the Sahara. |
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Naive question
I thought (part of) the reason diamonds are valued as a gemstone is because of the way they reflect and refract light when cut well. Granted, those big hunks of crystal people hang from their rear-view mirrors do that, too.
But are diamonds objectively better than other clear crystals at reflecting and refracting light? --
Drew |
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The short answer is "yes".
The refraction of diamonds makes them very brilliant - if cut in a very precise way at the proper angles - nothing else like it. A few crystals get close to the ballpark but not quite in it.
Of course manufactured diamonds do just as well as natural ones, with fewer flaws. |
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That's what I suspected, but ...
I don't know if I've ever heard that from someone who wasn't paid by DeBeers. But if it's true, then diamonds in jewelry are still better than a random piece of glass of the same shape. How much better is a good question, but not three months' salary worth.
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Drew |
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Wanna give me an education?
Buzzwords, web pointers I can believe, etc.
If I'm going to go in and make a deal, at least i should know what I'm negotiating for. Keep in mind the setting will obscure it a bit, only the top of the diamond will be seen since there is a white gold collar around the top. |
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go here, this is a respectable outfit
http://gia4cs.gia.ed...54CFQwJswodjmWesQ
but a little like having an MSCIE, different practitioners vary. At least the general stuff is there |
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It still needs to be clear
Light goes in the visible face, bounces around, comes back out different angles and different colors. If you've got an occlusion in the middle, the light stops there and doesn't come back out. That why, unlike opaque stones like opal, you don't need just one good face -- it has to be good all the way through.
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Drew |
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Better? Dunno.
As Andrew says, diamond has a pretty high refractive index which gives lots of fire and color when the light is refracted.
Here's a pretty good page on diamond properties: http://nature.berkel...//wisc/Lect6.html Diamond (C) Refractive Index = 2.42 Lead Glass (SiO2+PbOx) Refractive Index ~ 1.70 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_glass Cubic Zirconia (ZrO2) Refractive Index = 2.15Â2.18 http://en.wikipedia....ki/Cubic_zirconia Moissanite (Silicon Carbide) Refractive Index = 2.65-2.69 http://en.wikipedia....n_carbide#Jewelry The angles of the facets would need to be adjusted as the refractive index changes. There are other differences in the materials that affect how the light is scattered (e.g. birefringence). HTH a little. Cheers, Scott. |