----------------
On 6/16/2004 8:53:47 AM Iceman wrote:
Paul:
No smoke screen, just that I don’t feel like I should act like everybody else and blow smoke on the public. I report things that I’ve experienced to the public. If this interferes with all the widgets and gadgets you suggest people to wear at a party to prove to everybody they have a 'True' Hearts and Arrows diamonds then I’m sorry.----------------
You can see the arrow pattern under most light conditions with the unaided eye. Of course, in a set stone, you mostly won't be able to see the hearts. What I don't get about this whole discussion: A round brilliant supposedly features a symmetrical arrangement of facets. Shouldn't you always be able to see a symmetrical pattern then? To me, if I see a jumbled picture in a round brilliant, the cut is simply not done right. The H&A is not an ideal, the pinnacle of cutting, it's simply what a round brilliant is supposed to look like to begin with. If I wanted to be facetious

----------------
Another diamond ~ A true hearts and Arrows, or at least what you will except as being one 61% depth and 57 table. Ok that diamond came in and it sucked with a capital 'S”, it was an SI1 and it looked foggy (no florescence). The million pinpoint inclusions that were so fine it was hard to pick them up on a scope made it look that way.----------------
Iceman, that doesn't prove anything. You wouldn't say people shouldn't wear miniskirts, because here's a fat lady that doesn't look good in them. Of course you can cut a cloudy diamond to show the H&A pattern. You can put lipstick on a pig. Within limits, you can also get a diamond with poor proportions to show the H&A pattern, these are two different things: proportions and display of an optical pattern.
----------------
People need to see the diamonds, numbers don’t always help.----------------
Yes, but they help a lot most of the time. If a diamond is cloudy, oily or whatever, no proportions will make that go away. If a diamond is transparent and has good proportions, it will under most circumstances perform better than if the same diamond were cut with poor proportions. If the diamond is also cut to show a symmetrical (H&A) pattern, it will under most circumstances look more beautiful to most people than a stone showing a non symmetrical pattern.
----------------
Paul: What is the set standard for Hearts and Arrows I would like to hear this.----------------
Very interesting point, this goes beyond the question of symmetry or not. There was an earlier thread here on PS that mentioned one or two Japanese labs, and there was also a link to a document in Japanese that was supposed to explain the standards for true H&A. This information, I think, was posted by Superidealist. I'll do a search on it later.
Best,
Scotch