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Chip or natural?

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glitterata

Ideal_Rock
Joined
Apr 17, 2002
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4,798
Old timers may recall my weird little eagle-claw pear-shaped diamond ring. It started life in the mid-19th century somewhere in Europe, probably, as a man''s cravatte pin. It features an eagle''s talon holding a little (about .30 ct????) old-cut pear-shaped diamond. Here''s a picture, on the tip of my ring finger for scale:

birdclawring1.JPG
 
Over the course of a century and a half (or perhaps more), the diamond has accumulated a number of chips. But there''s one big patch under the prong at the tip that''s either a large chip or a natural. I was wondering if anyone could figure out which? I took a bunch of pictures.

birdclawring2.JPG
 
Another pic:

birdclawring3.JPG
 
Another:

birdclawring4.JPG
 
Another:

birdclawring5.JPG
 
Another. I''m really just curious. There''s nothing I''ll do differently if it''s a chip vs. a natural; it''s not worth it to try to repair it, and it seems pretty secure in its setting.

birdclawring6.JPG
 
Another:

birdclawring7.JPG
 
Another:

birdclawring8.JPG
 
Hm, I guess those last two were pretty similar. Okay, one more:

birdclawring9.JPG
 
Thanks, Rich!

Are the patches of what look like big feathers actually the chip reflecting?

I''m planning to go on wearing the ring as it is. Do you think that''s a terrible idea? I figured the chip is too big to be repaired easily, and repairing it would probably cost more than the ring.
 
Its lovely G !
 
HI:

Could you get a pic thru a loop?

cheers--Sharon
 
If you''re talking about the "patches" on the opposite end of the diamond, I can''t see them that clearly on my monitor, but yes, those are probably reflections of the chipped area. They''re situated about right.

I think you should wear it all you want. I''m not sure I''d bother repairing it. A lot depends on the size of the stone and whether you would want to resell it in the future.
 
Thanks, Rich, that''s what I thought. It''s a wee stone and no, I''m not planning on selling it--I love it, I can''t imagine who would buy it, and I certainly can''t imagine anyone offering me enough make it worth selling.

Sharon, I tried with the loupe, but the pics all came out much, much worse. No matter what I do, the camera wants to focus on the glass rather than the object behind it.
 
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