shape
carat
color
clarity

10k budget

ddNewbie

Rough_Rock
Joined
Nov 29, 2014
Messages
1
Hey all,

Looking for an eye clean diamond (SI1+?), GIA certified, with excellent cut, polish, and symmetry that would work well with this setting
www.tacori.com/engagement/2565rd9.html

Tacori uses G diamonds and higher in their settings, so does that mean I should get a G+ center stone so that it doesn't look yellow in comparison?

I imagine that I am looking for fairly common / desirable specs and have the common tradeoff between size and color. I tried using ps's search tool and I found:

http://www.adiamor.com/Diamonds/Results/D23820941

This diamond has strong fluorescence. I guess without seeing it in person I can't tell if it makes the diamond cloudy, right?

My goal is to buy the largest diamond that I can afford (10k budget for the stone) that has excellent light return and looks white in that setting.

Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
 
Don't waste money on a D VS1 unless there is a cultural reason for going for such high color and clarity. You are better off going for a G-H eyeclean Si1 and going up in size. This stone is a great one: http://www.jamesallen.com/loose-diamonds/round-cut/1.33-carat-h-color-vs2-clarity-excellent-cut-sku-374067 request an idealscope.

To help you understand:

The entire purpose of faceting a diamond is to reflect light.
How well or how poorly a diamond does this determines how beautiful it is.
How well a diamond performs is determined by the angles and cutting. This is why we say cut is king.
No other factor: not color, not clarity has as much of an impact on the appearance of a diamond as its cut. An ideal H will out white a poorly cut F. And GIA Ex is not enough. And you must stick to GIA and AGS only. EGL is a bad option: [URL='https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/egl-certification-are-any-of-them-ok.142863/']https://www.pricescope.com/community/threads/egl-certification-are-any-of-them-ok.142863/[/URL]
So how to we ensure that we have the right angles and cutting to get the light performance we want?
https://www.pricescope.com/wiki/diamonds/diamond-cut
Well one method is to start with a GIA Ex, and then apply the HCA to it. YOU DO NOT USE HCA for AGS0 stones.
https://www.pricescope.com/wiki/diamonds/holloway-cut-advisor
The HCA is a rejection tool. Not a selection tool. It uses 4 data points to make a rudimentary call on how the diamond may perform.
If the diamond passes then you know that you are in the right zone in terms of angles for light performance. Under 2 is a pass. Under 2.5-2.1 is a maybe. 2.6 and over is a no. No score 2 and under is better than any other.
Is that enough? Not really.
So what you need is a way to check actual light performance of your actual stone.
That's what an idealscope image does. https://www.pricescope.com/wiki/diamonds/firescope-idealscope
It shows you how and wear your diamond is reflecting light, how well it is going at it, and where you are losing light return. That is why you won't see us recommending Blue Nile, as they do not provide idealscope images for their diamonds. BGD, James Allen, GOG, HPD, ERD and WF do.

The Idealscope is the 'selection tool'. Not the HCA.
So yes, with a GIA stone you need the idealscope images. Or you can buy an idealscope yourself and take it in to the jeweler you are working with to check the stones yourself. Or if you have a good return policy (full refund minimum 7 days) then you can buy the idealscope, buy the stone, and do it at home.


Now if you want to skip all that... stick to AGS0 stones and then all you have to do is pick color and clarity and you know you have a great performing diamond. Because AGS has already done the checking for you. That's why they trade at a premium.
 
I have a J stone next to the Tacori G side stones. There is a difference from the side profile. From the top and from normal gaze it looks fine. I would do G or H if you are color sensitive and want to stay in the same range.
 
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