New-to-diamonds
Rough_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2014
- Messages
- 2
Hi, I'm new to this forum and found it by accident today, but it seemed to be the proper place to ask for opinions.
I found this ring at a large fleamarket on wednesday. The seller thought it was white gold, but I noticed that it had the swedish platinum purity mark stamped on the inside, as well as other marks that I couldn't identify before I got home. I didn't think much about the stone at first, because someone had tried polishing the ring with silver polish, so it was all dirty on the backside and I honestly didn't think it was anything other than some semi-precious rock. It wasn't till I got home and got it washed, that I noticed it was a very pretty stone.
So I decided to test the stone with my Diamond Tester, and it tested positive for diamond. I had never before heard about blue diamonds, so I got pretty excited, shocked, stunned, and a whole lot of other feelings when I started to google to find out what I had found, as well as healthy skepticism.
The ring was made in Sweden in 1935, from the date marks. It was made by Carl Gustav Hallberg (or rather his descendants, since he had already passed away in 188
. The purity mark means that the ring is at least 95% platinum. The diamond is around 6.1-6.2mm wide (I compared it to a 0.80 ct diamond my mother had on her ring, and this one was larger, so I guess around 0.9-1.0 ct, perhaps?
As is probably obvious, I am a novice when it comes to diamonds, and maybe I am all excited about nothing. I am planning on visiting one of the larger auction houses in my countrys capital, to get a more qualified opinion and after that make a decision about what to do next.
What do you people think?




I found this ring at a large fleamarket on wednesday. The seller thought it was white gold, but I noticed that it had the swedish platinum purity mark stamped on the inside, as well as other marks that I couldn't identify before I got home. I didn't think much about the stone at first, because someone had tried polishing the ring with silver polish, so it was all dirty on the backside and I honestly didn't think it was anything other than some semi-precious rock. It wasn't till I got home and got it washed, that I noticed it was a very pretty stone.
So I decided to test the stone with my Diamond Tester, and it tested positive for diamond. I had never before heard about blue diamonds, so I got pretty excited, shocked, stunned, and a whole lot of other feelings when I started to google to find out what I had found, as well as healthy skepticism.
The ring was made in Sweden in 1935, from the date marks. It was made by Carl Gustav Hallberg (or rather his descendants, since he had already passed away in 188
As is probably obvious, I am a novice when it comes to diamonds, and maybe I am all excited about nothing. I am planning on visiting one of the larger auction houses in my countrys capital, to get a more qualified opinion and after that make a decision about what to do next.
What do you people think?



