shape
carat
color
clarity

Price Check

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QuickRock

Rough_Rock
Joined
Oct 7, 2003
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A local jeweler I am working with has shown me this stone:
1.04ct
VS2
G
6.50-6.53mm x 4.0 mm
61.3% depth
59% table
Medium-Slightly Thick faceted girdle
No fluorescence
EX polish
VG symmetry

This has been negotiated down to $7000-7100. With some more pressing, they may go down to $6800. I saw the stone last week and it looks very good, but without knowing all the angles/dimensions, etc., does this price seem incredibly high for a non-online vendor, or just typical retail? The jeweler is saying that this is truly a cream of the crop stone.

Thanks.
 
QR: If this is indeed a cream of the crop stone, then the price seems reasonable for a B&M store. I'm finding H&A stones in that color/clarity/carat range on here for about $6200-6400, so the price seems reasonable for a B&M store if you can get it for $6800.




Personally, I'd bring in the pricing from the internet vendors and see if they will match.....nothing ventured, nothing gained.




Make sure, though, that you get more than the jeweler's *word* for it that it's truly an excellent cut. It may be an ideal cut, but may fall short of super-ideal, in which case the price may be less reasonable. The few dimensions you've given hint at a decent stone, but you really should press the jeweler to get a Sarin report for you with the crown/pavilion angles.
 
ok, I'm just posting to test my own knowledge about this subject - experts please chime in
read.gif


First looks like a stone I'd go for too - the right size, vs2, G are the right starting parameters in my world. The table (59) seems to be a tad on the large side though. Having the angles and putting it into the adviser is essential of course.

> $6800

Seems to be a tad high even for a GIA/AGL cert - a search for an AGS0 (better cut) stone in pricescope shows a lot of candiadates around $6000-$6400.

Cheers and gl
Nils
 


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On 10/8/2003 4:31:21 PM nilsm wrote:





> $6800

Seems to be a tad high even for a GIA/AGL cert - a search for an AGS0 (better cut) stone in pricescope shows a lot of candiadates around $6000-$6400.

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Hi, Nils: If he were able to get this stone for $6800, I don't believe that's especially high for a bricks-and-mortar vendor (providing it is indeed an ideal H&A make stone). The non-net world tends to have a bit of a mark-up to support their overhead (and the perceived convenience of viewing the stone in person, yada yada.)



I wouldn't pay this price for an internet purchase because there are clearly better prices to be had (as you've pointed out). But in the B&M world, this price might be reasonable.




 
How important Is the 1+ct. size? You could save a decent chunk of change $2000 - $3000 by going to something just under a carat. Many people wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a .97 and a 1.04ct stone. Plug in the specs close to your diamond's and see what you come up with. Try entering in .97 -.99 range with all the other specs the same.

Just my 2 cents.

MikeyG
 


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On 10/8/2003 5:45:56 PM MikeyG wrote:





How important Is the 1+ct. size? You could save a decent chunk of change $2000 - $3000 by going to something just under a carat. Many people wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a .97 and a 1.04ct stone. Plug in the specs close to your diamond's and see what you come up with. Try entering in .97 -.99 range with all the other specs the same.

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Weeeeeeeeeellllll.........yes and no. An ideal make G, SI-1 (which is down a clarity grade) runs about $4600-4800. If he's willing to fudge a little on the color and/or clarity AND drop below 1 ct., then he MIGHT save $2k. $3K.....no way.



And, easier said than done. There are very few .9x stones out there, largely because most cutters are motivated to fudge the cut to produce a 1ct stone (which means the make isn't as good, but it gets over the magic 1ct mark and therefore commands more per ct.)



As of this writing, there are NO ideal make stones available in the .97-.99 range when searching by cut quality. There are 3 in the .90 to .95 range..... 2 are F stones, 1 is G, and clarity varies down to SI-1.

 
aljdewey, yes, you're right - didn't notice the 'local jeweler' vs. online
rolleyes.gif


having a trusted local business where you can see the stone in person is worth a lot - thanks for pointing that out
appl.gif
 


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On 10/9/2003 12:58:57 PM nilsm wrote:





having a trusted local business where you can see the stone in person is worth a lot - thanks for pointing that out
appl.gif

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Perhaps I should clarify my comments. I personally don't believe that B&M jewelers offer anything that I cannot get from the fabulous internet vendors here. I don't feel B&Ms offer any "advantage". I personally do not believe that one must pay a premium and deal with a "local" vendor in order to see a stone in person.



Every one of the vendors I've listed will ship a stone to an appraiser near me to view prior to purchase if I ask. In short, I can get everything (and more) from them than I can from a local jeweler. I can see the diamond before purchasing just as easily as I can at a B&M store....but avoid paying the B&M markup.



I personally think that it's important to have a trusted business.....but it does not have to be local. I live in New England. I would have far more trust and confidence buying from GOG (NY), Whiteflash (TX) or NiceIce (OR) than I would from an unknown local entity.



As far as "trust", trust is earned by providing verifiable information about my purchase.....and trust is lost by telling me not to be concerned with angles or other information but to instead rely on the wisdom and *word* of the local jeweler.



Some people feel discomfort about making a purchase this large on the internet.....largely because they aren't aware that they can pre-inspect the diamond prior to purchase with good vendors.



Some people just like the experience of walking into an actual store, and as long as they don't mind paying considerably more for the privilege, that's great.



I'm an internet supporter all the way......providing we're talking about the proven, reliable vendors.




 
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