I recently began searching for a fancy yellow diamond, for a ring project. Silly me, I thought this would be easy. It has turned out to be rather more difficult than anticipated. I did my due diligence and read as much as I could about fancy colored stones, but now find myself wondering how to judge cut quality for the fancy colors?
Two separate vendors have told me that one judges fancy color diamonds by size and color, not by the quality of the cut. I would like to find a stone with good fire and brilliance, and I am doing my comparison shopping online because not many local jewelers seem to offer fancy colors at a reasonable price, so I wind up looking at photographs/videos and then reading the certs/trying to process the numbers.
A local B&M called in a 1.18 carat cushion-cut fancy yellow for me, and I went down to the store to see it. Under the store lights, the stone sparkled (of course!) but seemed a bit watery in the center. I mentioned to another vendor, who was also searching for fancy yellows for me, that I had seen a fancy yellow that seemed nice but the "watery" appearance in the center concerned me. He wrote back that all fancy yellows leak light a little bit through the center, and now I am wondering if that is true?
The "watery" stone in question has the following specs (taken from the GIA report):
Shape: Cushion Mod. Brilliant
Measurements: 6.53 x 5.53 x 3.61 mm
Color/origin:
Natural
Fancy
Yellow
Even
VS1
Polish: Good
Symmetry: Good
Fluorescence: Med. blue
Comments: Crown Angles greater than 40 degrees.
Depth: 67.1%
table: 65%
girdle: medium - very thick
What do you think of these numbers? Several vendors have warned me that I cannot use "ideal-cut" numbers to guide my judgment of a fancy yellow stone. They say that ideal cuts maximize the "whiteness" of a stone, and not the brilliance, so I can''t use those specs as guidelines to find well-cut, firey/brilliant fancy colors.
Would a slightly shallower stone (a vendor recommended a stone with 64.5% depth and 65% table) w/o high crown angles be "prettier"? Or would a deeper stone (say, with a depth closer to 70% and a table in the 63-65% range) be more beautiful?
Help! I get more confused by the day! How should I judge cut quality in a fancy yellow stone?
Two separate vendors have told me that one judges fancy color diamonds by size and color, not by the quality of the cut. I would like to find a stone with good fire and brilliance, and I am doing my comparison shopping online because not many local jewelers seem to offer fancy colors at a reasonable price, so I wind up looking at photographs/videos and then reading the certs/trying to process the numbers.
A local B&M called in a 1.18 carat cushion-cut fancy yellow for me, and I went down to the store to see it. Under the store lights, the stone sparkled (of course!) but seemed a bit watery in the center. I mentioned to another vendor, who was also searching for fancy yellows for me, that I had seen a fancy yellow that seemed nice but the "watery" appearance in the center concerned me. He wrote back that all fancy yellows leak light a little bit through the center, and now I am wondering if that is true?
The "watery" stone in question has the following specs (taken from the GIA report):
Shape: Cushion Mod. Brilliant
Measurements: 6.53 x 5.53 x 3.61 mm
Color/origin:
Natural
Fancy
Yellow
Even
VS1
Polish: Good
Symmetry: Good
Fluorescence: Med. blue
Comments: Crown Angles greater than 40 degrees.
Depth: 67.1%
table: 65%
girdle: medium - very thick
What do you think of these numbers? Several vendors have warned me that I cannot use "ideal-cut" numbers to guide my judgment of a fancy yellow stone. They say that ideal cuts maximize the "whiteness" of a stone, and not the brilliance, so I can''t use those specs as guidelines to find well-cut, firey/brilliant fancy colors.
Would a slightly shallower stone (a vendor recommended a stone with 64.5% depth and 65% table) w/o high crown angles be "prettier"? Or would a deeper stone (say, with a depth closer to 70% and a table in the 63-65% range) be more beautiful?
Help! I get more confused by the day! How should I judge cut quality in a fancy yellow stone?