Menlikediamondstoo
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2018
- Messages
- 244
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That does look pretty special, filling to see what the experts say
Is it a natural diamond or lab-grown? The certificate doesn’t state, and EGL will grade MMDs, as far as I know. Looks pretty white for EGL G that could be about 3 grades off of GIA. Also, even by EGL standards, the polish and symmetry are only rated “very good,”. Is this a picture of the actual ring?
Thank you. Yes, it’s the actual ring. Granted, different lighting can make a sone look whiter. Thank you for bringing up natural earth mined or lab, that is worth looking into. If it were lab grown though, I think that price would be way too high. Especially for a resale.
Please know that I’m not trying to rain on your parade! Just looking out for you ...
I hope this find is exactly what you’re looking for
Yep, there's a decided difference in the color of the (presumably same) wood table shown in the 2 pics in your original post due to different lighting conditions and/or differing manipulation of the "raw" photographs.Granted, different lighting can make a stone look whiter.
Yep, there's a decided difference in the color of the (presumably same) wood table shown in the 2 pics in your original post due to different lighting conditions and/or differing manipulation of the "raw" photographs.
I wish that EGL report had not come out of the EGL lab in Israel as evidenced by the report number beginning with 2. For years -- before and after that 2006 report -- EGL Israel consistently had the worst reputation of any of the EGL labs overseas** for "generous" grading.
Would this be a final sale; if the vendor has a return policy, is it a reasonable one; is the vendor here in the US (assuming you live in the States), so that a return would be less expensive, less of a hassle for you than doing an international return?
** EGL USA broke free from the EGL network and became its own independent entity earlier than 2006; its reports are clearly branded as EGL USA.
Have you been able to find true comparables, i.e., of loose stones graded by EGL Israel/EGL International? I know the PS Diamond Search database does not include any stones with EGL reports (not even EGL-USA, which I do consider more reliable), and neither does the Rapaport database, available to those in the trade (and perhaps what the diamond broker you consulted relied upon to give his/her range of value).since this is someone selling a used ER, the price is much lower than what I have seen of loose diamonds.
Have you been able to find true comparables, i.e., of loose stones graded by EGL Israel/EGL International? I know the PS Diamond Search database does not include any stones with EGL reports (not even EGL-USA, which I do consider more reliable), and neither does the Rapaport database, available to those in the trade (and perhaps what the diamond broker you consulted relied upon to give his/her range of value).
If you use the Used Engagement Ring Price Look-Up feature on the website where this ring is listed, you'll see that the estimated resale value of a 14K WG ring with a emerald-cut, 1.81 center stone graded by EGL International as H-VS1 is $5,214. Change the grading lab to EGL USA and the estimated resale value is $7, 018. Make the grading lab GIA & the estimated resale value becomes $8,925 -- or about 70% more than the EGL International estimate of $5214.
Granted, these are rough approximations -- an Asscher is not one of the shape-cut options; they don't take take into account the baguette side stones, or the cut quality of any stone in a ring -- but it is a sadly graphic illustration of how dimly regarded an EGL report is![]()
Based on his post at #12, it seems that @Menlikediamondstoo has jettisoned the idea of purchasing this ring & won't care if a lurker buys it. So I now feel comfortable saying that this wouldn't have been a retailer-consumer transaction. The seller isI would confirm with seller of the 10% restocking fee refers to “change of mind” transaction rather than return because not as stated “you said it was G VS1 yet the GIA says I Si1!”. Personally I won’t deal with people who charge restocking fees. If you’re buying sight unseen, you should be able to return it (at your cost) for a refund if it’s not as expected. Realistically very few people buy on a whim and waste vendors time by returning.
It could be an expensive exercise for you to not like it or find it not as stated - paying for a lab report, paying for return insured shipping AND paying a 10% restocking fee!
and she's listed it on HaveYouSeenTheRingsomeone selling their ER
No need to apologize! -- the disapproval of anti-affiliate website references in forum posts is kinda buried in the small print on the Policy page. Just was giving you a friendly heads-upThanks again everyone! And @MollyMalone my apologies! I dont want to break any rules.
I’m going to stick to 2ct gia! I’ll let you know when the search officially starts!