I''''ve been at the engagement setting / stone hunt for quite some time now (about 6 months) and I''''ve gotten a lot of time in reading and actually looking at stones with a loop, proportions scope...etc. Each of those stones has been GIA certified and I''''ve gotten a bit of a feeling over time as to what personality the stone has versus what''''s on the certificate. My impression has been that it should be 1:1. In other words, I''''ve yet to notice (I''''m not a professional but...) an instance where I''''ve examined a stone and thought "I see the inclusions on the GIA cert, but I see more going on in this stone than the certificate illustrates".
I chose the word "illustrates" because all text-attributes of the stone seem to jive. What I''''m looking at is a 1.61ct round, G-Color, Ex-cut, VG-sym, VG-pol, no culet, very-small girdle SI-2 stone. All of those specs meet my expectations for what I got to very intimately inspect. What doesn''''t jive are the illustrations of what the inclusions are and where they are. The GIA cert shows only 3 "twining whisps". Those three whisps to jive with what I thought I saw, but there are other things that I saw that don''''t jive. None of them were dark in color, and none were overly obvious. The stone was eye-clean, so really I think that his is a fairly exceptional SI-2 which is exactly what I''''m looking for.
But I was still apprehensive to buy. The dealer is a 70-year old man that my brother purchased from about 3-4 years ago from. I consider my brother a good judge of character, but even my brother stated that he seems like a business man but a relatively honest one. At the same token, my brother had one transaction with this gentleman, so it''''s not a sure-thing when you''''ve only got one experience to base a judge-of-character on.
This guy has been at the diamond business for over 45 years so I find it hard to believe that he''''d have a fraudulent certificate, but has anyone ever seen a stone that had more going on than it''''s legitimate GIA certificated illustrated? Assuming that certificate is legitimate and the person grading the stone was just very "easy" on the grading report for whatever reason, are there any potential pitfalls I should be aware of if the stone meets my expectations but the certificate is inaccurate? I don''''t ever see us reselling this stone so I foresee the certificate really only being for insurance purposes.
Thanks in advance for any feedback you take the time to offer.
Sincerely,
Sal C.
I chose the word "illustrates" because all text-attributes of the stone seem to jive. What I''''m looking at is a 1.61ct round, G-Color, Ex-cut, VG-sym, VG-pol, no culet, very-small girdle SI-2 stone. All of those specs meet my expectations for what I got to very intimately inspect. What doesn''''t jive are the illustrations of what the inclusions are and where they are. The GIA cert shows only 3 "twining whisps". Those three whisps to jive with what I thought I saw, but there are other things that I saw that don''''t jive. None of them were dark in color, and none were overly obvious. The stone was eye-clean, so really I think that his is a fairly exceptional SI-2 which is exactly what I''''m looking for.
But I was still apprehensive to buy. The dealer is a 70-year old man that my brother purchased from about 3-4 years ago from. I consider my brother a good judge of character, but even my brother stated that he seems like a business man but a relatively honest one. At the same token, my brother had one transaction with this gentleman, so it''''s not a sure-thing when you''''ve only got one experience to base a judge-of-character on.
This guy has been at the diamond business for over 45 years so I find it hard to believe that he''''d have a fraudulent certificate, but has anyone ever seen a stone that had more going on than it''''s legitimate GIA certificated illustrated? Assuming that certificate is legitimate and the person grading the stone was just very "easy" on the grading report for whatever reason, are there any potential pitfalls I should be aware of if the stone meets my expectations but the certificate is inaccurate? I don''''t ever see us reselling this stone so I foresee the certificate really only being for insurance purposes.
Thanks in advance for any feedback you take the time to offer.
Sincerely,
Sal C.