- Joined
- Apr 30, 2005
- Messages
- 34,307
I am a viewer and I have no idea. I thought it was a preference (just like I prefer vintage round cuts to H&A cuts). I do like it a lot in radiant shapes, but dislike it immensely in others like marquise & pear. It's particularly bad when I see it is mixed with chunkier facets in something like a cushion. Though in general too crushed to me always looks bad no matter what. I know I have been told that in most cuts it is a sign of a bad cut. I haven't seen a radiant in person that doen't look "crushed" to me. But my thoughts on crushed ice might be different than others.Date: 1/6/2010 7:30:57 PM
Author: kenny
None of the 52 people who have viewed this know the answer?![]()
Heh Kenny seems like a loaded question. I've never heard of it being anything other than a negative term. We don't want to wear watery crushed ice on our hands otherwise we could save major $$$ and buy polished glass or cubics.Date: 1/6/2010 6:10:10 PM
Author:kenny
Is the crushed-ice look considered a good or a bad thing in a diamond?
Is it considered to be desirable in some cuts but undesirable in other cuts?
Over the years I have read things that make me confused about the use of this term.
Date: 1/6/2010 7:36:49 PM
Author: ChunkyCushionLover
Heh Kenny seems like a loaded question. I've never heard of it being anything other than a negative term. We don't want to wear watery crushed ice on our hands otherwise we could save major $$$ and buy polished glass or cubics.Date: 1/6/2010 6:10:10 PM
Author:kenny
Is the crushed-ice look considered a good or a bad thing in a diamond?
Is it considered to be desirable in some cuts but undesirable in other cuts?
Over the years I have read things that make me confused about the use of this term.
Please provide a post or pictures of where it is used as a positive descriptor. My impression is mostly from how Rhino uses the term, to describe less than optimal light return in Fancy shape diamonds, given you have a lot of experience please reference where you have seen it used in other ways.
Date: 1/6/2010 7:48:43 PM
Author: kenny
Date: 1/6/2010 7:36:49 PM
Author: ChunkyCushionLover
Date: 1/6/2010 6:10:10 PM
Author:kenny
Is the crushed-ice look considered a good or a bad thing in a diamond?
Is it considered to be desirable in some cuts but undesirable in other cuts?
I see the look in almost all cuts off axis, even great cuts like my ACA, Solasfera, Asscher and Octavia.
I
Kenny, you say the Octavia can have a crushed ice look? I''d love to see photos where it exhibits this. Your photos are amazing, and I loved looking at your thread, but never saw a crushed ice look, only clearly defined facets. So beautiful.
I have a radiant, it does many things in different lights and sometimes goes crushed ice, but then it shifts and shoots rainbows, and goes translucent , or casts deep black and white shadows- it does many things and varies thoughout the day, and constantly surprises me. . Twilight is its best time, I think, but I was surprised by your post , hopefully quoted above, that Octavia can take on a crushed ice look.
hahhahah!!Date: 1/6/2010 10:25:56 PM
Author: kenny
I''m going to get into big trouble here.
If many people define crushed ice look as a negative, and I don''t, and I used it to describe not only Octavia but every finely-cut diamond I own I''m going to wake up dead tomorrow.
This is a horrid pic that is the only one I have already taken which remotely is useful here.
See how in the asscher the pattern is prominent?
See the Octavia how the pattern is not as prominent. It is a little off-axis. When even more off-axis the pattern is even more vague as in all diamonds.
What you see in the Octavia is a very very bright diamond (the goal of this pic, though poorly executed ) but not the strong pattern? To me seeing a lack of pattern IS the crushed ice look.
I suspect 99.9% of diamond industry experts will call my definition of the crushed ice look wrong.
Associating crushed ice with Octavia will be like sullying the reputation of a 15-year old Spanish virgin who lives out in a small rural village.
In my opinion small flash or small virtual facets is not the problem if the stone was full of them! Thats why some people like the 102 faceted rounds and many modern cuts. But that is not what I would use the term watery crushed ice to describe as and I don''t see it used to describe rounds very often.Date: 1/6/2010 7:58:01 PM
Author: kenny
If crushed ice look is a negative thing could someone please post some pics of a diamond exhibiting the ''crushed ice'' look?
Well I don't associate brightness with crushed ice no sir. A stone with nice bright flash uniformly distributed is not what I see when I look at crushed ice.Date: 1/6/2010 10:25:56 PM
Author: kenny
I'm going to get into big trouble here.
If many people define crushed ice look as a negative, and I don't, and I used it to describe not only Octavia but every finely-cut diamond I own I'm going to wake up dead tomorrow.
This is a horrid pic that is the only one I have already taken which remotely is useful here.
See how in the asscher the pattern is prominent?
See how in the Octavia (the top stone) the pattern is not as prominent as in the asscher?
The Octavia is a little off-axis. When even more off-axis the pattern is even more vague as in all diamonds.
What you see in the Octavia is a very very bright diamond (the goal of this pic, though poorly executed ) but not the strong pattern? To me seeing a lack of pattern IS the crushed ice look.
I suspect 99.9% of diamond industry experts will call my definition of the crushed ice look wrong.
Associating crushed ice with Octavia will be like sullying the reputation of a 15-year old Spanish virgin who lives out in a small rural village.
Do not make that association.
Rather, blame me for not adopting the apparent industry standard of the definition of the crushed ice look.
Actually Paul there was a poll we ran recently with 9 different cuts and the stone in the upper right hereDate: 1/7/2010 5:01:29 AM
Author: Paul-Antwerp
Hi Kenny,
I read this thread with interest.
Let me first try to give my definition of ''crushed ice'': a preponderance of small virtual facets, with almost no bigger virtual facets. This is most often caused by too many facets and/or asymmetry. Depending on the shape and faceting-pattern of the diamond, it can occur more or less frequently, in other words, some shapes and faceting-patterns lend themselves easier to a crushed-ice-look.
I personally would not use the term for a stone, being observed from an angle, since that stone will probably still show bigger virtual facets, and if in movement, the nature of the stone will continually change. A stone with ''crushed ice'' observed face-up will likely not have bigger-size virtual facets when tilting the stone.
From experience with consumers, my feeling is that the general preference of unprepared consumers in real-life-observations is not for a crushed-ice-look. So, I definitely consider it as a negative term.
For that reason, I suppose that many producers of multi-facet-stones often use huge models of their stones to show them off compared to a regular round-brilliant. Because of the size of these models, they probably indeed look better.
On a side-note, that is also one of the pitfalls of online-observations. Pictures are a lot bigger than the actual stones, and the observation is not the same as in-real-life. As a reference, look at the current Cushion-poll of Garry. He indicates a preference for stones with more virtual facets. I wonder if this is not due to the size of the pictures.
Live long,
"Polished glass or cubics"Date: 1/6/2010 7:36:49 PM
Author: ChunkyCushionLover
Heh Kenny seems like a loaded question. I''ve never heard of it being anything other than a negative term. We don''t want to wear watery crushed ice on our hands otherwise we could save major $$$ and buy polished glass or cubics.Date: 1/6/2010 6:10:10 PM
Author:kenny
Is the crushed-ice look considered a good or a bad thing in a diamond?
Is it considered to be desirable in some cuts but undesirable in other cuts?
Over the years I have read things that make me confused about the use of this term.
Please provide a post or pictures of where it is used as a positive descriptor. My impression is mostly from how Rhino uses the term, to describe less than optimal light return in Fancy shape diamonds, given you have a lot of experience please reference where you have seen it used in other ways.