Very difficult to assess from those photos. Does the stone have a grading report that you can post? Do you have any other images? There is a tool on this site where you can get a genera idea of what would be comparable pricing.
I believe HRD is a good lab.
HRD is indeed a quality lab.
Thank you both for confirming...I definitely don't want to give out incorrect information, and I may be thinking of a different grading lab whose name eludes me right now.
Thank you everyone for weighing in. I do like the 1.03 diamond a lot. What are the risks/downfalls to a diamond that is cut too deep and doesn’t have preferable proportions?
Even less well proportioned stones will sparkle and look great in jewelry store lighting. Get them in office lighting or other poor lighting situations and you will wish you had gotten great proportions.
Experienced dealers grade unset diamonds with a loupe, backlit to enable a thorough clarity examination. Well-cut diamonds appears dark and dull because the head and loupe block light from the front of the stone, while NGZ diamonds sparkle because light from the dealer’s lamp is able to enter the pavilion. This and the fact that most institutions approve diamonds with NGZ proportions explains why we find we reject more than 90% of the diamonds we see.
Because less light is returned via the crown facets fire is enhanced when these stones are examined (in the manner that most dealers do) held at arms length in tweezers and rocked from side to side. The leakage area displays excellent fire, but once set of course there is no back lighting supply. This leakage not only results in a loss of light return, but also patchy static scintillation. NGZ diamonds should be set in ways that enable light to enter via the pavilion.