Azetab|1488847711|4137323 said:Hey, I see a new diamond line out by Brian Gavin called Black and after doing a lot of research online, I haven't been able to really find out a lot of information about the line. Does any one know if the cut for the Black line is considered better than A Cut Above from Whiteflash?
ChristineRose|1488849053|4137340 said:There was a long thread about it somewhere.
They use a technique called painting, which increases the white light return (brilliance) of the stone at the expense of scintillation (shifting patterns of light and dark as the stone moves).
Stones like this have been around for a while; the best know is Eightstar. Some people love them, some people...don't. Gavin's version is unique to them and they claim that the stone balances the best of both worlds.
gm89uk said:ChristineRose|1488849053|4137340 said:There was a long thread about it somewhere.
They use a technique called painting, which increases the white light return (brilliance) of the stone at the expense of scintillation (shifting patterns of light and dark as the stone moves).
Stones like this have been around for a while; the best know is Eightstar. Some people love them, some people...don't. Gavin's version is unique to them and they claim that the stone balances the best of both worlds.
Hey, not sure what the reference for this is? I looked at their scope images and they don't appear particularly painted.
ChristineRose|1488935588|4137872 said:gm89uk said:ChristineRose|1488849053|4137340 said:There was a long thread about it somewhere.
They use a technique called painting, which increases the white light return (brilliance) of the stone at the expense of scintillation (shifting patterns of light and dark as the stone moves).
Stones like this have been around for a while; the best know is Eightstar. Some people love them, some people...don't. Gavin's version is unique to them and they claim that the stone balances the best of both worlds.
Hey, not sure what the reference for this is? I looked at their scope images and they don't appear particularly painted.
Hi gm89uk.
You can see the painting by looking at the ASET images on this page:
http://www.briangavindiamonds.com/news/black-brian-gavin-vs-brian-gavin-signature/
The small triangles on the edge of the stone are smaller (more red), and there's more green and less black. A general tend towards red-ness.
They have also clearly made some changes to the other minor facets to reduce green under the table. It appears to be a combination of changes to minor facets.
So what does this mean? If you could fit a mirror into an Idealscope (you couldn't unless it was a perfect one-way mirror...) you'd see a flat red image. Green is light going off to the side. If you're tilting the diamond, you see the green areas flash in and out of view. Scintillation. It's pretty much inherent. If more light is thrown up, then less light is thrown to the side.
I really have no idea what me (or anyone else) would say if I were shown a bunch of otherwise comparable Blacks and ACAs. Many people prefer "(sort of) badly" cut stones. I'm sure they are gorgeous rocks. Brian Gavin is considered a master cutter. But as I said, others have cut stones to maximize ASET red before and most people didn't like them as well.
Azetab|1488994393|4138039 said:ChristineRose|1488935588|4137872 said:gm89uk said:ChristineRose|1488849053|4137340 said:There was a long thread about it somewhere.
They use a technique called painting, which increases the white light return (brilliance) of the stone at the expense of scintillation (shifting patterns of light and dark as the stone moves).
Stones like this have been around for a while; the best know is Eightstar. Some people love them, some people...don't. Gavin's version is unique to them and they claim that the stone balances the best of both worlds.
Hey, not sure what the reference for this is? I looked at their scope images and they don't appear particularly painted.
Hi gm89uk.
You can see the painting by looking at the ASET images on this page:
http://www.briangavindiamonds.com/news/black-brian-gavin-vs-brian-gavin-signature/
The small triangles on the edge of the stone are smaller (more red), and there's more green and less black. A general tend towards red-ness.
They have also clearly made some changes to the other minor facets to reduce green under the table. It appears to be a combination of changes to minor facets.
So what does this mean? If you could fit a mirror into an Idealscope (you couldn't unless it was a perfect one-way mirror...) you'd see a flat red image. Green is light going off to the side. If you're tilting the diamond, you see the green areas flash in and out of view. Scintillation. It's pretty much inherent. If more light is thrown up, then less light is thrown to the side.
I really have no idea what me (or anyone else) would say if I were shown a bunch of otherwise comparable Blacks and ACAs. Many people prefer "(sort of) badly" cut stones. I'm sure they are gorgeous rocks. Brian Gavin is considered a master cutter. But as I said, others have cut stones to maximize ASET red before and most people didn't like them as well.
Hey ChristineRose,
So you're saying that cutting stones to maximize ASET red isn't necessarily going to make the stone "look" better? I want to get a diamond that has the best light performance and brilliance. My belief was that getting a super ideal cut (ACA, Black by Brian Gavin, Crafted by Infinity) would essentially give me the best light performance. Is that not true? Any insights would be very helpful!
Bfan,bmfang|1489016353|4138184 said:Azetab|1488994393|4138039 said:ChristineRose|1488935588|4137872 said:gm89uk said:ChristineRose|1488849053|4137340 said:There was a long thread about it somewhere.
They use a technique called painting, which increases the white light return (brilliance) of the stone at the expense of scintillation (shifting patterns of light and dark as the stone moves).
Stones like this have been around for a while; the best know is Eightstar. Some people love them, some people...don't. Gavin's version is unique to them and they claim that the stone balances the best of both worlds.
Hey, not sure what the reference for this is? I looked at their scope images and they don't appear particularly painted.
Hi gm89uk.
You can see the painting by looking at the ASET images on this page:
http://www.briangavindiamonds.com/news/black-brian-gavin-vs-brian-gavin-signature/
The small triangles on the edge of the stone are smaller (more red), and there's more green and less black. A general tend towards red-ness.
They have also clearly made some changes to the other minor facets to reduce green under the table. It appears to be a combination of changes to minor facets.
So what does this mean? If you could fit a mirror into an Idealscope (you couldn't unless it was a perfect one-way mirror...) you'd see a flat red image. Green is light going off to the side. If you're tilting the diamond, you see the green areas flash in and out of view. Scintillation. It's pretty much inherent. If more light is thrown up, then less light is thrown to the side.
I really have no idea what me (or anyone else) would say if I were shown a bunch of otherwise comparable Blacks and ACAs. Many people prefer "(sort of) badly" cut stones. I'm sure they are gorgeous rocks. Brian Gavin is considered a master cutter. But as I said, others have cut stones to maximize ASET red before and most people didn't like them as well.
Hey ChristineRose,
So you're saying that cutting stones to maximize ASET red isn't necessarily going to make the stone "look" better? I want to get a diamond that has the best light performance and brilliance. My belief was that getting a super ideal cut (ACA, Black by Brian Gavin, Crafted by Infinity) would essentially give me the best light performance. Is that not true? Any insights would be very helpful!
Hey Azetab,
Maximising ASET red is essentially trying to maximise brilliance in my books. WF, BG Signature Ideal, BG Black, Crafted by Infinity all are worth exploring in your search for a stone which will exhibit the best light performance out in the market.
It is not.flyingpig|1488937314|4137878 said:I am not sure if painting is the main technique that is used in Black by BG.
Texas Leaguer|1488920727|4137760 said:Azetab,
Within A CUT ABOVE we also have our Collection Series in colorless, microscopically clean super ideals.
Thanks and congrats- you have something very special!Lore|1489131881|4138748 said:I wish you guys would advertise the Collection Series more! I stumbled upon that page a while back (after I had bought from you) and was surprised to learn that mine was one of the Collection Series purely based on the specifications. There's no easy way to filter for CS otherwise, is there?