Not surprisingly, I disagree with Kenny here. I find professional advice to be very helpful in this sort of situation, at least carefully chosen professional advice. A consignment jeweler is not such a bad place to get 'free' advice if you like but bear in mind that the question being answered by a consignment seller is 'How much can you sell this for?' The question you're actually trying to get answered is 'What's the best way to sell this?'. These are not the same and I beg to differ with the presumption that Internet is the best way to sell a poorly cut Euro (assuming that's what it is although the evidence is weak so this may not be valid). I even disagree that GIA is necessarily the best place to get this pedigreed or that lab grading is the first place to start. It's decently likely that GIA will call that a 'poor' cut round brilliant and that's a deal killer for nearly any buyer who is picky enough to be looking for a VVS clarity (unless you're charging SI prices so it doesn't matter).kenny|1370811887|3462236 said:I'
IMHO the only use of an appraisal is so you know what to insure it for when you ship it USPS Registered to GIA, and if there is a loss you have a document establishing today's value.
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That doesn't make you unbaised, but one thing you are is an anonymous stranger who has far less than complete information. THAT doesn't make you wrong, but it's a relevant piece of the decision. We don't know what the merchandise is. We don't know the client's objectives and requirements. The client isn't even the person who asked the question!kenny|1370827718|3462401 said:I'm unbiased because I do not make money from posting here.
My advice is to have your Mom start with an appraisal. There's a list of local appraisers under the resources tab at the top of the page. Tell the appraiser what you want to know and ask questions. I gave a few in my last post that might be helpful but she may have others as well. If the advice involves sending it to a lab, get advice on which one to use. Assuming she's in the US, USPS registered mail is secure and inexpensive or you can insure the item (using the report from the appraiser and www.jewelersmutual.com) and then ship vial FedEx. Ask the appraiser what an appropriate insurance limit is.20GT|1370832170|3462456 said:thanks for all the reply's.
So it must be safe to send your diamond through the mail, because most of you talk of it?
Seems crazy to me.
but you say insured, so how much do i get it insured for?
or are you saying get it appraised in town? then shipped off for a full diagnostic.
if i was to try to sell it in town are there any brand name franchises that buy older diamonds?