gwendolyn
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2007
- Messages
- 6,770
I''ve been reading a bunch of threads here (I''ve been lurking a while) that say, for example, an E/VVS1 is an E/VVS1 regardless of where you get the stone, how old it is, etc., which is what I had assumed was true until I was told otherwise when shopping recently.
A few months ago I went out comparison shopping for diamonds, to try some on (I''m still deciding between round and princess), and after looking at a number of stones, I found a lovely princess that was a G and appeared to have almost no hint of colour. Shortly after, I went to Tiffany to see the rings in person, looked at a G there and it seemed to be (comparatively) saturated with colour; it looked quite dingy. I asked the man behind the counter about the difference in a G at Tiffany and a G at this other store, if they were rated on the same colour scale, and he told me that the colour grades were arbitrary, and that they could vary wildly depending on the person writing up the report.
This seemed highly strange to me, but since he worked at the store and I didn''t, I figured he must know something I don''t. But is this true? Does the amount of colour in a stone vary depending on the individual who certifies it? Or did he possibly mean that different certification associations have different scales? The way he said it, it definitely sounded like each person could have a different definition of what "E" or "G" was. Clarification, please? And apologies if this is a dumb question.
A few months ago I went out comparison shopping for diamonds, to try some on (I''m still deciding between round and princess), and after looking at a number of stones, I found a lovely princess that was a G and appeared to have almost no hint of colour. Shortly after, I went to Tiffany to see the rings in person, looked at a G there and it seemed to be (comparatively) saturated with colour; it looked quite dingy. I asked the man behind the counter about the difference in a G at Tiffany and a G at this other store, if they were rated on the same colour scale, and he told me that the colour grades were arbitrary, and that they could vary wildly depending on the person writing up the report.
This seemed highly strange to me, but since he worked at the store and I didn''t, I figured he must know something I don''t. But is this true? Does the amount of colour in a stone vary depending on the individual who certifies it? Or did he possibly mean that different certification associations have different scales? The way he said it, it definitely sounded like each person could have a different definition of what "E" or "G" was. Clarification, please? And apologies if this is a dumb question.
