Hello guys! How accurate is a pencil type diamond tester? I have these earrings tested by a pencil type diamond tester at a pawnshop and they said it's real heart shaped purple diamonds. Please comment how accurate a pencil type diamond tester? I attached the picture of the earrings. Thanks!
Hello guys! How accurate is a pencil type diamond tester? I have these earrings tested by a pencil type diamond tester at a pawnshop and they said it's real heart shaped purple diamonds. Please comment how accurate a pencil type diamond tester? I attached the picture of the earrings. Thanks!
They are very pretty, but I'm afraid those testers are pretty inaccurate.
If they are actual purple diamonds, they are either synthetic (unlikely--they look too old) or worth a whole lot of money.
Any jeweler should be able help you. To me they look like color change sapphires which were often sold as "Alexandrite" in the 1960s to 1970s. Try viewing them under bright daylight and in a dark room under an incandescent light bulb or flashlight. Color-change sapphire will go from blue to purplish-red.
The thermal type diamond testers are decently reliable within the context of what they're designed to do and when properly used. The trick is that pawn shop employees aren't necessarily well trained in the proper use. That's a matter of assessing the employees, not the stones. Some pawn shops also contain some serious experts.
Hello guys! How accurate is a pencil type diamond tester? I have these earrings tested by a pencil type diamond tester at a pawnshop and they said it's real heart shaped purple diamonds. Please comment how accurate a pencil type diamond tester? I attached the picture of the earrings. Thanks!
They aren’t purple diamonds. Either amythest or possibly CZ. Still very pretty. If the pawnshop wants to pay you ”diamond price”, I’d grab their money and run!