sugarplum
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2007
- Messages
- 693
Also, you personally don''t like the combo but the stone isn''t terrible is it?Date: 6/15/2007 12:48:59 PM
Author: sugarplum
Hi Strmrdr- What do you think could''ve improved this combo? The crown angle?
Hi enbcfsobe- Glad to hear that your stone worked out. My BF and I have decided to purchase online so the numbers mean a lot since we can''t see the actual stone before we buy it. We don''t want to buy something and end up having to ship it back and go through that process.Date: 6/15/2007 1:08:19 PM
Author: enbcfsobe
The crown angle is a little high. I think 34.5 is where the excellent range tops out for CAs. That said, I have the same crown/pav angles but my table is 57. This gets it to a 2.5 or 2.6 as well on the HCA, but I went with it anyway. I''m not sure what exactly the effect is of a slightly larger table -- maybe better spread?
In any event, while you could probably do better in terms of specs, don''t lose sight of the fact that you should be picking what you like best. I only felt comfortable with my decision after comparing mine to some that had HCA scores by the numbers. I still liked the look of mine better or at least equally in various lighting situations. It is worthwhile to do these kinds of comparisons (and definitely to get it out from under the store lights!) before making a call. Despite being only VG on the HCA, that VG gets me loads of compliments about how sparkly my stone is (and it is sometimes almost embarassing to compare to some of the super-deep, lifeless stones some of my friends and colleagues have -- too bad they didn''t have any PS help!)
Not terrible. Garry is revising the HCA and some of the current 2.X numbers will become included the recommended range.Date: 6/15/2007 12:06:22 PM
Author:sugarplum
Hi All,
This stone scored a 2.5 on the HCA. Should I pass on it?
Table: 55%
Depth: 61.8%
Crown angle: 35.5
Paviliion angle: 40.8
Girdle: Thin-Medium
Stars: 50%
LGF: 80%
And how terrible is a 2.5? Would it still perform well (just not as nicely compared to stones that score under a 2)?
In general I agree with the hca with a discount over the best of the ideal cuts its worth a look but compare it too an ideal cut.Date: 6/15/2007 1:16:18 PM
Author: sugarplum
Also, you personally don''t like the combo but the stone isn''t terrible is it?Date: 6/15/2007 12:48:59 PM
Author: sugarplum
Hi Strmrdr- What do you think could''ve improved this combo? The crown angle?
The HCA comment of ''worth buying if price is right'' kind of makes it seem like a bad stone...but 2.5 isn''t thaaat high up. I''ve seen a stone in person before that looked nice so I was surprised when I punched the numbers in to find that it scored a 4.5 on the HCA.![]()
Hi John- Will this CA/PA combination affect the stone''s color?? It''s an F, 1.55 cts. If I''m paying for an F, I want it to face up like an F should--white! I''ve seen an F color stone with a 34 degree CA and 41.6 PA...it was not a pretty sight. It was yellow because of the deep PA! I think it traumatized me...Date: 6/15/2007 1:46:51 PM
Author: JohnQuixote
Not terrible. Garry is revising the HCA and some of the current 2.X numbers will become included the recommended range.Date: 6/15/2007 12:06:22 PM
Author:sugarplum
Hi All,
This stone scored a 2.5 on the HCA. Should I pass on it?
Table: 55%
Depth: 61.8%
Crown angle: 35.5
Paviliion angle: 40.8
Girdle: Thin-Medium
Stars: 50%
LGF: 80%
And how terrible is a 2.5? Would it still perform well (just not as nicely compared to stones that score under a 2)?
The CA/PA combination is not what we''re accustomed to seeing around here but it isn''t bad. These proportions would receive GIA EX and the AGS cut guidelines predict AGS1 (the actual grades would depend on particulars). By the numbers it would be be a good performer, probably quite fiery. Do you have an ideal-scope image?
No. As DS said, a colorless diamond won’t show color. The "F" you're reporting should not have been an F by GIA/AGS standards if you perceived yellow. At 41.6/34 a stone could appear dark if you held it very close (due to head shadow) but that's not a combination that entraps body color. What you saw may also have been influenced by the shirt were you were wearing, what was in the background, what colors were on the wall and ceiling, the signage around you, etc.Date: 6/16/2007 4:16:11 AM
Author: sugarplum
Hi John- Will this CA/PA combination affect the stone's color?? It's an F, 1.55 cts. If I'm paying for an F, I want it to face up like an F should--white! I've seen an F color stone with a 34 degree CA and 41.6 PA...it was not a pretty sight. It was yellow because of the deep PA! I think it traumatized me...Now I make sure I stay away from any CA/PA combos that might turn a colorless stone yellow!![]()
John, that 41.6/34 F stone was white under a diamondlite but when you took it out--yellow! We put it up next to a G and the G was so so so much whiter than the F.Date: 6/16/2007 10:59:21 AM
Author: JohnQuixote
No. As DS said, a colorless diamond won’t show color. The ''F'' you''re reporting should not have been an F by GIA/AGS standards if you perceived yellow. At 41.6/34 a stone could appear dark if you held it very close (due to head shadow) but that''s not a combination that entraps body color. What you saw may also have been influenced by the shirt were you were wearing, what was in the background, what colors were on the wall and ceiling, the signage around you, etc.Date: 6/16/2007 4:16:11 AM
Author: sugarplum
Hi John- Will this CA/PA combination affect the stone''s color?? It''s an F, 1.55 cts. If I''m paying for an F, I want it to face up like an F should--white! I''ve seen an F color stone with a 34 degree CA and 41.6 PA...it was not a pretty sight. It was yellow because of the deep PA! I think it traumatized me...Now I make sure I stay away from any CA/PA combos that might turn a colorless stone yellow!![]()
A poorly cut DEF can look lifeless or dark, but 40.8/35.5 would not cause that. It would help to have an ideal-scope image of course.
Just for the record, there are configurations which cause color to be trapped more when present. More about that here.
Sorry Sugarplum, my mistake. As I was typing 41.6/34 this morning I was thinking 40.6/34, thus my comment about head shadow. Give me a redo... That combo could indeed look dark. It shouldn't look yellow (not a GIA/AGS F) but a well-cut G would certainly look brighter. As was said above, cut can affect the face-up tone.Date: 6/16/2007 1:43:33 PM
Author: sugarplum
John, that 41.6/34 F stone was white under a diamondlite but when you took it out--yellow! We put it up next to a G and the G was so so so much whiter than the F.
I don't have an ideal scope image of the 40.8/35.5 I'm considering...wish I did. How exactly does a higher crown angle (i.e. 35.5) affect a stone?
You have to ask the vendor for one.Date: 6/16/2007 1:05:59 AM
Author: sugarplum
I don''t have an idealscope image of this stone.![]()
John, I am not so sure of that now...Date: 6/15/2007 1:46:51 PM
Author: JohnQuixote
Not terrible. Garry is revising the HCA and some of the current 2.X numbers will become included the recommended range.
The CA/PA combination is not what we''re accustomed to seeing around here but it isn''t bad. These proportions would receive GIA EX and the AGS cut guidelines predict AGS1 (the actual grades would depend on particulars). By the numbers it would be be a good performer, probably quite fiery. Do you have an ideal-scope image?
Date: 6/16/2007 5:29:06 PM
Author: JohnQuixote
Sorry Sugarplum, my mistake. As I was typing 41.6/34 this morning I was thinking 40.6/34, thus my comment about head shadow. Give me a redo... That combo could indeed look dark. It shouldn''t look yellow (not a GIA/AGS F) but a well-cut G would certainly look brighter. As was said above, cut can affect the face-up tone.Date: 6/16/2007 1:43:33 PM
Author: sugarplum
John, that 41.6/34 F stone was white under a diamondlite but when you took it out--yellow! We put it up next to a G and the G was so so so much whiter than the F.
I don''t have an ideal scope image of the 40.8/35.5 I''m considering...wish I did. How exactly does a higher crown angle (i.e. 35.5) affect a stone?
The 55% table and 35.5 crown angle combine to make it fiery; lots of colored flashes. If you can, compare it to a larger tabled shallow-crowned stone (near 60% table, 60% depth - very common and bright) and a modern Tolkowsky (56-57, 40.8, 34.5). You''ll have three cool diamonds to look at. They should be similar color/clarities. View them in several lighting conditions as you''re able. If all perform well you should see character differences between the 40.8/35.5 and the 60/60 pretty easily. The 40.8/35.5 and Tolk will be much closer; the primary technical diff is that Tolks have crown height near 15% and yours is closer to 16%. A pinch more fire maybe - just be sure it''s bright enough for you compared to the Tolk.
Garry, would the IS looking good only be consistent with the non-leaky scores accepted by the current HCA cut-off?Date: 6/24/2007 2:26:52 AM
Author: Garry H (Cut Nut)
John Q is correct, the ideal-scope image of this stone and symmetry could save it.
It probably has a nice amount of fire - but if there are symmetry issues i would pass on it