winnietucker
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2019
- Messages
- 2,716
Not, in this case.
I wonder if you might do better trading your existing stone in and getting something that appeals to you more. What is it about your stone that you are finding that you don't like? (your proportions seem only a hair over what would normally be recommended, and the HCA cut score is good, so I'm wondering what it is you are seeing IRL that is troubling you).
I think it’s the knowledge that super ideal diamonds exist. We bought this diamond thinking GIA triple ex was the gold standard and then I found Pricescope...
If it scored a 1.7 on the HCA it means the proportions theoretically work well together... I think you’d benefit from ordering an ideal scope and ASET and learning how to use them so you can check the light performance for yourself. It’ll be cheaper than a new diamond and you may find that you don’t need to replace yours.
I get that. You want something that is mind clean. What I would say to you though is that your HCA score is in the range where most ps'ers would recommend being (<2). That means that the angles of your stone are theoretically complementary and that you should be getting good light return. You may have lucked out and found something close to being in the super ideal range without the markup (it's the non-branded unicorn of diamonds). Given the good cut score, I'm not sure it would be worth it to trade it in at a loss because you might find that you can't actually see much difference between your stone and a super ideal. What I would suggest is that you maybe visit a store that sells superideals in person if you can and compare your stone with a super ideal. If you still feel strongly about trading it, at least you know. If you don't, you'd know that too. But @distracts suggestion of getting an ideal scope and ASET and looking at your stone makes good sense too.
Did you "love" the diamond before you discovered PS? If so then stop wasting your time, enjoy the rock and move on with your life!
From what I understand it's rarely ever worth it to recut a diamond... And that alternative ask carries big risks with it.
To be fair, we were young and in college when we got engaged, I was just happy to be getting a diamond as large as mine is! If my husband hadn’t chatted with a particular sales rep I probably would have ended up with a smaller, poorly cut diamond and I would have been thrilled with it then too. Now that we’re more established and have more money, my focus for everything is quality.
What color is your diamond?To be fair, we were young and in college when we got engaged, I was just happy to be getting a diamond as large as mine is! If my husband hadn’t chatted with a particular sales rep I probably would have ended up with a smaller, poorly cut diamond and I would have been thrilled with it then too. Now that we’re more established and have more money, my focus for everything is quality.
what is it that you like, but not love, about the diamond? A well cut 55/36/40.6 can be as good as a super ideal cut diamond.
Do you have any photo?
1.3ct is pretty damn impressive for a college student! I suggest you hang onto him![]()
Who was giving you that feedback?
can we see it on your hand ?
please i mean
Don’t.
You will pay good money to lose carat weight and I doubt if after recutting the visual difference in sparkle will be worth the loss of size.
The stats on your diamond are perfectly good, I think you are focusing too much on perceived “faults” due to a higher HCA score.
You need to see some “more perfect” diamonds in person and alongside your existing diamond to decide whether or not the small visual difference is worth losing $1,300 plus reselling your existing diamond plus the extra premium to buy the super ideal.
I would sit tight, keep saving towards the super ideal diamond and rather than lose money on your existing diamond, turn it to a diamond pendant.
Depth isn't going to effect the light return at all, in fact depth has nothing to do with light return.
The height is in the crown.
If the numbers are anywhere close to right(gia rounding) and it looks like the optical symetry is reasonable or better by the pic, its a diamond I would put on my wifey's finger.
I love these high crown combos.