mike04456
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2002
- Messages
- 1,441
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On 2/6/2004 2:43:21 PM Nicrez wrote:
Certainly, now people will be forced to learn more about a stone's cut, which is subjective----------------
I disagree, Nicrez. People cannot be forced to consider or learn anything if they feel it is extraneous.
The bulk of people will continue to follow the credo beat into them by their jewelers about the 4Cs, and they won't ask questions about cut unless someone tries to explain that diamond A is priced higher than diamond B because of its make.
That probably happens now; there is just nothing on paper with the grading report to substantiate the claim, and now there will be.
There's a difference between a general feeling and scientific evidence. The latter is what's taken GIA so long to gather. The problem is slipperier than it might appear.----------------
On 2/6/2004 6:11:36 PM pqcollectibles wrote:
I think it's interesting that GIA took 10 years to validate what I've already learned on PS. Not every diamond that fits the Tolkowsky Ideal parameters will be a great performer. Diamonds that don't fit the Tolkowsky Ideal can be great performers.
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On 2/6/2004 6:44:41 PM LawGem wrote:
There's a difference between a general feeling and scientific evidence. The latter is what's taken GIA so long to gather. The problem is slipperier than it might appear.----------------
On 2/6/2004 6:11:36 PM pqcollectibles wrote:
I think it's interesting that GIA took 10 years to validate what I've already learned on PS. Not every diamond that fits the Tolkowsky Ideal parameters will be a great performer. Diamonds that don't fit the Tolkowsky Ideal can be great performers.
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From the article:
The traditional Ideal cut will no doubt fall into GIA's top cut category...
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On 2/8/2004 11:06:51 AM oldminer wrote:
Just a couple more thoughts on this topic. It is one of my special areas of interest.
Do you think the GIA will offer the cut grade of previously measured and examined diamonds to those who now have GIA reports at no cost? I very much doubt it. Will the cost be nominal or on the high side? I'd bet to the high side if history can be used to make a judgment.
Will those folks who have the data needed to make a GIA cut grade be able to go somewhere on the Internet or in a software program to find out what the cut grade is or will the ONLY source of the cut grade be the GIA Lab itself? I would think the GIA will make it a very private methodology, but I could be wrong.
I suppose their defense is you don't invest ten years of research to give it away, but as a non-profit entity supported by those in the trade, the information really is property of those who paid for it if not actually, then morally. Sharing the result of ten years of effort, supported by the trade, but then offering only to sell the grading service is not a very good return to the trade on their investment.
I hope that dealers, sight holders, cutters and the public will have access to the process of cut grading offered by the GIA. It will be very interesting to me how this new process will be introduced and to whose benefit.----------------