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David- it again comes down to your opinion. How could you possibly be able to state unequivocally that an "ugly fancy will never be Ideal"64%; HEIGHT: 950px" class="ibbquote">Date: 3/12/2010 12:51:35 PM
Author: oldminer
If you seek ''IDEAL'' in a fancy shape, you will NEVER select an 80% deep Princess cut over one with 65% depth, and in round brilliants you would never select one with 63% depth or more, provided the stones being examined for purchase all have equal light return and brilliancy.
The fancy one with 65% depth or the round with less than 63% depth will be SUPERIOR then, simply because they look larger than deeper stones. An overly deep stone may be a great light performer, but it falls down on the apparent size issue. This means it could NEVER BE IDEAL, if something BETTER equals its light performance and also has a better attribute, namely apparent size.
You can readily select the finest POTENTIAL cut by numbers and parameters. Right now you cannot predict which ones will give the very finest light return, but you can eliminate all the stones that will be too thin, too thick, not durable or ugly in length-to-width ratio. This is not an imaginary benefit that was dreamed up somewhere, but comes from years of grading diamonds and being interested in what other experts want and expect from the finest fancy shapes. An ugly fancy will NEVER be an IDEAL. A very deep fancy will never be a true IDEAL. A fragile stone will never be IDEAL. Too deep a stone, no matter how brilliant, is not IDEAL, Too thin a stone, no matter how large or accidentally brilliant, will never be IDEAL. There are people who do not choose to buy Ideal cut diamonds. It is up to each one of us to judge if a diamond is ugly, beautiful or somewhere in between. Calling it ''Ideal'' does not mean it is the only stone to consider buying.
IDEAL is the ULTIMATE, not simply due to a performance based on brilliancy. While brilliancy alone may be the way the general industry would like to grade fancy shapes and/or rounds, so that any diamond, no matter how poorly cut, is ''IDEAL'' as long as it is highly brilliant, this is a foolish notion. This approach would favor cutters and dealers at the expense of integrity and punish those few consumers who still have some degree of faith in diamond sellers.
IDEAL is an absolute concept of TOP QUALITY light return and cutting, and it ought to be seen as encompassing all the aspects of each stone so judged. Anything less is not really an unqualified Ideal cut. Individual consumers can buy based on their own concept of beauty, price, or any other set of parameters they choose, but only a limited number of diamonds deserve to be called “Ideal Cut” as they are near perfect in technical as well as performance specs.
The AGA Cut Class grades and the HCA for rounds provide the shape information that one adds to brilliancy information. This brilliancy information can be from Ideal-Scopes used with round diamonds, the ASET Scope and from tools such as Gemex, ImaGem or Isee2. The parametric and performance information is also part of the AGS system grading structure. This combination of expert knowledge, technical data, and science gives today’s dealers and consumers the currently best tools and information to judge or grade a diamond as “IDEAL“. No doubt we will see further technological scientific advancement in grading in years to come. I predict grading of diamonds, including cut grading, will continue to become more of a science based structure than it is today and that the trade will argue about it for many years to come. Progress or change always creates controversy.
Fancy shapes, by their very nature, vary due to things like corner size, and overall shape. What if AGSL gave an oval "0" cut grade, but one did not like it''s overall shape?
The term "ideal" has no agreed upon meaning unless we are referring to an AGS cut grade.
I think we can all agree that the term is one of the most misused terms in diamond advertising.
This is at the root of this discussion. It can not be "scientifically proven" that light return or optical symmetry equals beauty.
It is not true that the most brilliant round is the most beautiful to all- or even most.
What''s better, an electric heater, or a wood stove?
We can argue that the electric heater is a scientific advance, yet many will prefer the wood stove.
We could advertise that the electric heater was a scientific advance- and charge more for it.
Of course many people today will prefer the old fashioned wood stove.
What I continually see as misinformation is the effort to equate cut charts, and reflector technology to science. Then this is used to "prove" one stone is better than another.
People are saying that they can see significant difference between "super ideal" and "normal".
I agree that stones will look different based on the cut.
But who''s to say what is identified as "super ideal" will be preferred by all looking.
Furthermore, if the "super ideal" stones are more costly, wouldn''t it make more sense to advise people that this is an opinion based distinction, and that looking at diamonds may result in them picking the less costly "non super ideal"
Or we can insist that it''s "scientifically proven" that the super ideal "performs better", which is the norm here.
If education is the goal, it should also include more widely held views. I would say "alternative" but so many well thought of sellers would agree with my assessment that it''s actually not alternative.
Not to say an opinion is correct because a majority believe it- only that if education s the goal, a rounded discussion forwards that.
Can an emerald cut with 50% depth be beautiful?
If it''s "potential" we''re discussing, maybe not.
But if it''s actual stones, it might be an amazing looking diamond with great spread.