Chevrons wont tell you that. Chevrons will give you an idea of how many facets there are and their size. More facets, smaller flashes of light seen more
up close. Less facets will give you some bigger flashes of light (but less facets) that may be seen more at a distance. This is all "in general" info. The stone
must be well cut which you pretty much will only know with an ASET image, AGS000 grading and possibly up close video.
This stone has a pretty decent aset. Slight loss in the corners of the table but thats fairly normal (no worries IMO). It has 4 chevrons. See the back of
the clarity plot you posted. The big X in the center does not count.
My idea as far as chevrons...the smaller the stone the less chevrons it can handle. The bigger the
stone the more chevrons it can handle. I think it is more personal opinion. What do you like to
see when you look at a princess cut stone?
That’s a very helpful explanation of chevrons. It’s a 1.50 carat stone. I wonder whether 4 chevrons will be too many - I’m not sure what I prefer as I’ve not compared 2/3/4 chevron diamonds. I think something in the middle of the two extremes of 2 and 4 would be nice
Also would more chevrons hide or expose colour more? If it’s a H colour, generally would that appear more white with 4 chevrons. Or does it make no difference whatsoever?
Go look on James Allen at over 1 carat stones. You should be able to look at their GIA reports to see how many chevrons they have. See if one
Faceting pattern appeals to your more than the other. So this is all based on logic (in my mind) and not personal experience. Less facets (less chevrons, bigger
facets) I would think would tend to face up more brighter/whiter looking. More facets (more chevrons, smaller facets) more chance for color
entrapment (show more color). H is my opinion is still fairly white. Color usually shows up in the corners of the table where there is leakage.
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