The stone seemed totally eyeclean to me (then again i''m not really good w picking up inclusions w my naked eye) but on the certificate and with the loop you could see that it was sprinkled all over with little minor inclusions. the lady told me that this is much better than having one large feather or something...Date: 7/1/2007 7:29:58 PM
Author: kcoursolle
EGL is known to be a bit softer in grading compared to GIA or AGS. Your stone may actually be an F/I1 and it may not be eye clean in clarity.
Also, keep in mind that cut quality is the most important part of what makes a diamond sparkle, and we need crown and pavillion angles to tell if your stone is going to be well-cut.
The price seems high to me overall. Similar stones are coming in at under 10k for a 1.5 E/SI2 and for under 6k for an F/I1 about this size: http://www.jamesallen.com/search_results.asp?cid=131&sbmt=1&shape=BR&carat_from=1.49&carat_to=1.6&color=%27E%27&color=%27F%27&clarity=%27SI2%27&clarity=%27I1%27&price=&cut_grade=0&cut_grade=1&fromtabledepth=&totabledepth=&fromtablesize=&totablesize=&x=84&y=13
ETA: just noticed that it''s an IGL and not EGL...this might be even softer...
i''m pretty sure it was egl..she said that there is an american version that is not good, very lenient and a european based version that was on target with gia...Date: 7/1/2007 7:29:27 PM
Author: diamondseeker2006
I think somebody is trying to rob you. The closest to that I can find online is an ideal cut F SI2 GIA certified diamond from WhiteFlash at $9358. An EGL Europe cert may not be as reliable as GIA and that stone could easliy really be F color and I1 in clarity. But even if it is represented accurately, the price is far from being a good deal. That $19,000 retail figure is ridiculous! My advice to you is to go elsewhere to shop. I would not trust this jeweler.
http://www.whiteflash.com/round_ideal_cut/Round-Ideal-Cut-cut-diamond-231889.htm
(I was just assuming you meant EGL. If it is really IGL, that is probably worse!)
This is just wrong! Labels such as "ideal" are thrown out here and there often and are less meaningful than the actual numbers. Please stick around and learn about cut before making a purchase.Date: 7/1/2007 8:22:49 PM
Author: Carats
The stone seemed totally eyeclean to me (then again i'm not really good w picking up inclusions w my naked eye) but on the certificate and with the loop you could see that it was sprinkled all over with little minor inclusions. the lady told me that this is much better than having one large feather or something...Date: 7/1/2007 7:29:58 PM
Author: kcoursolle
EGL is known to be a bit softer in grading compared to GIA or AGS. Your stone may actually be an F/I1 and it may not be eye clean in clarity.
Also, keep in mind that cut quality is the most important part of what makes a diamond sparkle, and we need crown and pavillion angles to tell if your stone is going to be well-cut.
The price seems high to me overall. Similar stones are coming in at under 10k for a 1.5 E/SI2 and for under 6k for an F/I1 about this size: http://www.jamesallen.com/search_results.asp?cid=131&sbmt=1&shape=BR&carat_from=1.49&carat_to=1.6&color=%27E%27&color=%27F%27&clarity=%27SI2%27&clarity=%27I1%27&price=&cut_grade=0&cut_grade=1&fromtabledepth=&totabledepth=&fromtablesize=&totablesize=&x=84&y=13
ETA: just noticed that it's an IGL and not EGL...this might be even softer...
Also, she told me that crown and pavillion angles become irrelevant as long as the stone is considered to be 'ideal' cut - based on the fact that it is ideal cut makes it have great angles.
It definitely did sparkle a lot in person....
She''s wrong!!Date: 7/1/2007 8:24:18 PM
Author: Carats
i''m pretty sure it was egl..she said that there is an american version that is not good, very lenient and a european based version that was on target with gia...Date: 7/1/2007 7:29:27 PM
Author: diamondseeker2006
I think somebody is trying to rob you. The closest to that I can find online is an ideal cut F SI2 GIA certified diamond from WhiteFlash at $9358. An EGL Europe cert may not be as reliable as GIA and that stone could easliy really be F color and I1 in clarity. But even if it is represented accurately, the price is far from being a good deal. That $19,000 retail figure is ridiculous! My advice to you is to go elsewhere to shop. I would not trust this jeweler.
http://www.whiteflash.com/round_ideal_cut/Round-Ideal-Cut-cut-diamond-231889.htm
(I was just assuming you meant EGL. If it is really IGL, that is probably worse!)
Hang in there! I think there are some similarities of all of the posts here: the stone is overpriced, there is concern about the quality of the stone, and there is concern about what the salesperson is saying and her trustworthiness.Date: 7/1/2007 10:29:13 PM
Author: Carats
wow. this is getting to be such an insanely unpleasant process. everyone says something different...