Date: 10/14/2005 3:19:40 PM
Author: DND168
Thank you for the comments.
Belle: assuming the crown and pavilion angles are in the ''ideal'' numbers, and so if the brilliancescope analysis is very high for all 3 categories is Very HIGH, can I expect a fiery and sparkly diamond?
Date: 10/15/2005 4:39:09 AM
Author: Daniel B
I was looking for a very firey diamond also, but i have now concluded to go with a TIC diamond. If a diamond has a VH in brilliance (white light) and VH in colored light, it will be very bright in all lighting, and in dimmer conditions or candle light the fire will outplay the white light. Why take away the white light at the expense of fire? Each kind of light will jump with the kind of environment its in. Ive seen diamonds in office light that didn''t sparkle with white light and it looks like a piece of ''nothing''-- very lifeless--very undesirable. Then i saw one that had lots of white light and it looked very very nice and shiney. Dont get me wrong you can still see fire under office (fluro) lighting-- so i''d recommend TIC that gives you the best of both worlds. Plus you are mostly under brilliance type of lighting anyway. Please dont let me sway you one way or the other, do what you think is right for you-- as long as its <2.0 on the hca you''ll be happy with the stone!![]()
Date: 10/15/2005 8:05:26 PM
Author: Daniel B
~Storm~
So do you consider 75-76 LGF small?
Ya, I''ve noticed thatDate: 10/15/2005 8:09:47 PM
Author: strmrdr
77 gets lost in the shuffle :}
Hi DND,Date: 10/14/2005 12:51:46 PM
Author:DND168
Greetings.. quick question..
On the BrillianceScope Analysis, if the white light, color light and scintillation results are in the high/very high range. does this mean there is a lot of ''fire'' on this stone? if not, what are these analysis used for>?
does it fall in the TIC/BIC/FIC range?