GIA does not stipulate which lab location graded any given diamond. Did the seller indicate firm knowledge that it was graded in India?eiger|1413991510|3770996 said:I am seriously considering a stone (or at least seeing it on 30 day approval) that has a GIA Indai certificate. I spoke to one jeweler about this who told me that GIA india is junk and the stone's ratings are inflated. Is this true?
Where it's located now doesn't necessarily reflect where it was graded. Diamonds in NYC were not necessarily graded there, just as diamonds in Mumbai, Antwerp, Tel-Aviv and HK may have traveled through different suppliers. For that matter, capacity and take-in may dictate that diamonds submitted in location A may be shipped and graded at location B.eiger|1413999337|3771064 said:I am told that the stone I am interested in is in Mumbai. I found the stone using pricescope's search tool. When I called to ask about it I was told not to bother even though the numbers looked promising.
I wasn't aware of that until now, as some sellers have in-house inventory. The comment about the diamond being in Mumbai is a pretty good signal that it's not an in-house option, unless they have a department there. I remain confused about where you got these impressions: (a) Diamond X was graded by GIA India. (b) GIA's lab in India has different standards than other GIA locations.eiger|1414001611|3771079 said:The seller - although,as I'm sure you are aware, this is not a stone that is in their inventory. It is part of their virtual inventory -accessible by other sellers.
Maybe. Maybe not. There are partnerships between suppliers and retailers where some inventory ("virtual") is offered to retailers A,B,C but not to retailers D-Z. Other suppliers don't mind to sell to anyone who pays them.Do most jewelers have access to the same stones?
Whether a mistake or a scare tactic, this is bad information. Full stop. Can you say who this was? If you prefer not to ID that seller, perhaps you can list the others you're working with who are providing good info. This community is very aware and supportive of retailers who shoot-straight.eiger|1414013939|3771210 said:Then they said that it was in Mumbai and that meant it was graded by Gia India which has standards well below Gia in the U.S.
Diamonds are diamonds. We sell to three different continents. They are not magically less or more expensive (business to business) depending on the destination. What end-consumers will pay differs depending on location and market - but that's the same everywhere. Someone buying in the shops at Caesar's Palace or a Ski Shop in Aspen will likely pay more for a piece of jewelry than the same piece offered by a capable online seller.I called a well-regarded jeweler (at least well regarded here on ps) to ask what they thought and to see if they might be able to source the diamond (this way I would be working with a reputable company). They told me they don't import stones although they also said that imported stones are cheaper than domestic ones and so, if I see a stone that looks like a great deal in a diamond search, it is probably imported. She agreed though that the proportions on this stone look promising.
There is nothing to the concept of "disreputable branch" so dismiss that. Meanwhile, a milky SI1, especially if not eye-clean, would logically be priced significantly lower than other 3ct diamonds (same paper grades) that are clean, with no optical issues. Usually, if a deal seems to good to be true there is an underlying fundamental issue. Here...the milky comment and eye-clean question are the notable flags.This is all harder than I thought. When I performed my search there was no indication that the stone was in India, cloudy, graded by a disreputable branch of the Gia, or difficult to import. Can someone tell me what to believe? Here I was getting excited that I might have found something really nice.
There are many companies publishing lists of thousands of diamonds from multiple suppliers. When someone calls they consult the supplier's notes - so they may be learning of any deficiencies at that moment. This is a key difference between "In-House" diamonds (meaning truly in-house, vetted for color, clarity, etc. per Wink's post) and "virtual" diamonds somewhere offsite - where the seller only has some text to go-by.OVincze|1414016998|3771249 said:I find this sort of strange that they are listing this diamond but yet when someone calls to enquire about it, they all tell you not to buy practically losing business.
eiger|1414024061|3771320 said:Since I am a novice at buying diamonds, do you think that I will be able to see milkiness if I inspect a diamond in person? Should I avoid buying online because I may end up with a milky stone that "looks good" on paper? Is there a reason why milkiness is not noted on GIA reports? I think now I am feeling paranoid that I will make a mistake and end up with a milky stone!
eiger|1413991510|3770996 said:I am seriously considering a stone (or at least seeing it on 30 day approval) that has a GIA Indai certificate. I spoke to one jeweler about this who told me that GIA india is junk and the stone's ratings are inflated. Is this true?
One of the challenges in buying from virtual inventory is the number of uncertainties that both you and the vendor are dealing with until the stone is brought in-house and fully evaluated, and indeed until it is delivered to you and you can satisfy yourself that it is the stone for you. The uncertainty is compounded when it comes to diamonds of lower clarity. As you move down through the clarity scale, each grade becomes broader, encompassing a wider range of features that can potentially have negative impacts. For instance, the main grade setting feature on this diamond is a feather. It appears to be fairly large and may or may not present some durability concern or be visible to the naked eye from certain angles. It also has many twinning wisps which many consumers feel are "good" inclusions because they are semi-transparent and harder to discern than other types of features, but which also can potentially impact the overall transparency of the diamond and therefore light performance.eiger|1414027226|3771351 said:Ok - now I understand. Clouds can mean a stone looks milky.
How about this one?
AGS 104072952014
Weight 3.244
It is an si2 so Perhaps it is too included to be eye clean?
I feel like I am back to the drawing board again.
All the same, drop shippers are typically not recommended here, when there are plenty of PS vendors who will call in diamonds from virtual inventory for professional inspection before selling to the customer, thus saving the customer the time, cost, and hassle of having the diamond appraised and going through the merchandise return process if problems are found (problems that would have been caught by prior to sale if working with one of the recommended PS vendors).MelisendeDiamonds|1414069441|3771493 said:There is nothing disreputable on its face about a dropshipping vendor who doesn't sell in house stones. The large majority of stones sold on the internet are sold by dropshippers, find a reputable one with a good return policy and usually their is little risk or cost to you if you are unsatisfied.
Hi Whiterock,WhiteRock|1414092153|3771688 said:I do work with sellers in Mumbai and receive their weekly inventories and they do mark some stones as slightly milky. Check if the stone has clouds as an inclusion? If yes stone can be milky. Another reason is strong fluorescence.
And about being GIA India is junk - thats just a dirty tactic to scare you away from buying the stone.
Yes its Diwali, their annual festival going on in India right now.
Edited.
Another very common trade word that is used in the Asian/South Asian trade is 'No BGM' whenever trading stones within the trade. It means No brown, green, milky.
That's a good point drk. I'm not sure that everyone understands the distinction between a drop shipper and merchant offering a virtual inventory and doing quality control on the merchandise.drk14|1414102316|3771806 said:All the same, drop shippers are typically not recommended here, when there are plenty of PS vendors who will call in diamonds from virtual inventory for professional inspection before selling to the customer, thus saving the customer the time, cost, and hassle of having the diamond appraised and going through the merchandise return process if problems are found (problems that would have been caught by prior to sale if working with one of the recommended PS vendors).MelisendeDiamonds|1414069441|3771493 said:There is nothing disreputable on its face about a dropshipping vendor who doesn't sell in house stones. The large majority of stones sold on the internet are sold by dropshippers, find a reputable one with a good return policy and usually their is little risk or cost to you if you are unsatisfied.
drk14|1414102316|3771806 said:MelisendeDiamonds|1414069441|3771493 said:There is nothing disreputable on its face about a dropshipping vendor who doesn't sell in house stones. The large majority of stones sold on the internet are sold by dropshippers, find a reputable one with a good return policy and usually their is little risk or cost to you if you are unsatisfied.
All the same, drop shippers are typically not recommended here, when there are plenty of PS vendors who will call in diamonds from virtual inventory for professional inspection before selling to the customer, thus saving the customer the time, cost, and hassle of having the diamond appraised and going through the merchandise return process if problems are found (problems that would have been caught by prior to sale if working with one of the recommended PS vendors).
MelisendeDiamonds|1414122597|3771946 said:Are you certain B2C or UnionDiamond aren't recommended here from time to time? Are you certain they would not do any checks prior to shipping to the consumer? You sure any costs on shipping both ways aren't picked up by the dropshipper with no risk to the client?
drk14|1414124618|3771959 said:MelisendeDiamonds|1414122597|3771946 said:Are you certain B2C or UnionDiamond aren't recommended here from time to time? Are you certain they would not do any checks prior to shipping to the consumer? You sure any costs on shipping both ways aren't picked up by the dropshipper with no risk to the client?
I seem to have touched a nerve!I don't know what the above questions have to do with my comment.
Just to clarify, as I understand the term, a drop shipper does not receive the diamond before it goes to the customer.
MelisendeDiamonds|1414129920|3771988 said:Perhaps you weren't aware(or I am mistaken) that B2C and Union Diamond had access to the original diamond in India mentioned by the OP and they are primarily "dropshippers".
Just to clarify, as I understand the term, a drop shipper does not receive the diamond before it goes to the customer.
Well you may define it any way you wish it is not so black and white, the reality is I as a vendor can choose to do any/all of the following:
i) Call or e-mail a supplier and ask questions? (Is it eye clean?)
ii) Contact the supplier and get images(where available)
iii Contact the supplier and get a sarin scan(where available)
iv) Ship the diamond to my office and inspect it prior to shipping to the customer
v) Tell the supplier to ship directly to the customer
While for most customers especially B2B I only have to do v) that doesn't preclude me from doing i) to iv) on a case by case basis does that make me a "dropshipper"?
Some businesses only sell virtual stones, they have no inventory, they routinely only ship stones from supplier directly to the customer, but they may have more information available to them (like CG ASET images ) on some stones rather than others depending on if the supplier provides it or not.
I'm stumped. Since there isn't any commercial diamond mining taking place in the USA, his/her inventory can't possibly consist of solely or even mostly domestic stones. Could someone in the trade shed light on what this person might have meant to convey? Thanks!eiger|1414013939|3771210 said:* * * I called a well-regarded jeweler (at least well regarded here on ps) to ask what they thought and to see if they might be able to source the diamond (this way I would be working with a reputable company). They told me they don't import stones although they also said that imported stones are cheaper than domestic ones and so, if I see a stone that looks like a great deal in a diamond search, it is probably imported. * * *
I think the reference is to bringing in a virtual diamond that is located outside the US. There are logistics considerations and costs associated with the process that some companies don't want to take on. Especially if they are offering a return privilege, where returning it to the foreign supplier may not be an option.MollyMalone|1414178091|3772173 said:I'm stumped. Since there isn't any commercial diamond mining taking place in the USA, his/her inventory can't possibly consist of solely or even mostly domestic stones. Could someone in the trade shed light on what this person might have meant to convey? Thanks!eiger|1414013939|3771210 said:* * * I called a well-regarded jeweler (at least well regarded here on ps) to ask what they thought and to see if they might be able to source the diamond (this way I would be working with a reputable company). They told me they don't import stones although they also said that imported stones are cheaper than domestic ones and so, if I see a stone that looks like a great deal in a diamond search, it is probably imported. * * *
MelisendeDiamonds|1414122597|3771946 said:<Snip>
Those vendors consistently recommended here are also the same vendors who tend to disparage GIA XXX
<Snip>
Though I respect Wink's opinion, I am NOT one of those vendors who disparage GIA XXX. No more than I disparage a GIA Si1. There are some Si1 that are great, some that are so-so, and some that I would not buy.Wink|1414183677|3772205 said:MelisendeDiamonds|1414122597|3771946 said:<Snip>
Those vendors consistently recommended here are also the same vendors who tend to disparage GIA XXX
<Snip>
I am one of those vendors who disparage GIA XXX and will continue to do so since it is a basically worthless grade that encompasses both beautiful and lifeless diamonds under the auspice of XXX.
When they publish a cut grade based on science I will be ecstatic in my change of tune.
Wink