- Joined
- Jan 19, 2018
- Messages
- 235
I know I am swimming against the current here, why you said "No Flour" 99% of the stories against Flour are Hearsay without anyone knowing exactly why.
It all started with the Labs that looked for another criteria for a diamond, add another pin to the diamond’s ID,
Than people start saying; why GIA marks on each diamond the flour, it must be a negative character.
And from there to "No Flour" the road was short.
Fluorescence is not negative, it is just another characteristic in the diamond's details list that helps identifying the diamond. Certification started as a diamond's ID not an appraisal paper.
GIA is trying to kill this ghost and put a small leaflet in each of his small certificates explaining that Flour has no impact on the diamond's appearance.
Only in rare cases where the Flour is very strong or more there might appears haziness in the diamond.
So here you have another tool for finding a diamond that is cheaper (with no reason) just because it has some Flour, My customers are very happy with this window to cheaper diamonds.
There was a time that Mr. Rapaport published a list that shows a price hike in the IJKL color diamonds with Medium Flour.
Below is the GIA Tutorial from
http://4cs.gia.edu/en-us/blog/understanding-diamond-fluorescence/
"What impact does fluorescence have on the appearance of a diamond?
GIA studies show that for the overwhelming majority of diamonds, the strength of fluorescence has no widely noticeable effect on appearance. In the GIA Fluorescence Study, it was found that the average person could not make a distinction between a diamond with fluorescence and a diamond without.
In many instances, observers prefer the appearance of diamonds that have medium to strong fluorescence. In rare cases, some diamonds with extremely strong fluorescence may appear hazy or oily; fewer than 0.2% of the fluorescent diamonds submitted to GIA exhibit this effect
Does fluorescence compromise the structural integrity of the diamond?
No.
A diamond that fluoresces has the same integrity as one with no reaction to UV. Submicroscopic substitutions and/or shifts in the diamond structure can cause fluorescence or can prevent it. Nothing in either instance inherently weakens or is bad for the diamond."
If You take an H with a Medium Flour you got yourself a winner!
David

It all started with the Labs that looked for another criteria for a diamond, add another pin to the diamond’s ID,
Than people start saying; why GIA marks on each diamond the flour, it must be a negative character.
And from there to "No Flour" the road was short.
Fluorescence is not negative, it is just another characteristic in the diamond's details list that helps identifying the diamond. Certification started as a diamond's ID not an appraisal paper.
GIA is trying to kill this ghost and put a small leaflet in each of his small certificates explaining that Flour has no impact on the diamond's appearance.
Only in rare cases where the Flour is very strong or more there might appears haziness in the diamond.
So here you have another tool for finding a diamond that is cheaper (with no reason) just because it has some Flour, My customers are very happy with this window to cheaper diamonds.
There was a time that Mr. Rapaport published a list that shows a price hike in the IJKL color diamonds with Medium Flour.
Below is the GIA Tutorial from
http://4cs.gia.edu/en-us/blog/understanding-diamond-fluorescence/
"What impact does fluorescence have on the appearance of a diamond?
GIA studies show that for the overwhelming majority of diamonds, the strength of fluorescence has no widely noticeable effect on appearance. In the GIA Fluorescence Study, it was found that the average person could not make a distinction between a diamond with fluorescence and a diamond without.
In many instances, observers prefer the appearance of diamonds that have medium to strong fluorescence. In rare cases, some diamonds with extremely strong fluorescence may appear hazy or oily; fewer than 0.2% of the fluorescent diamonds submitted to GIA exhibit this effect
Does fluorescence compromise the structural integrity of the diamond?
No.
A diamond that fluoresces has the same integrity as one with no reaction to UV. Submicroscopic substitutions and/or shifts in the diamond structure can cause fluorescence or can prevent it. Nothing in either instance inherently weakens or is bad for the diamond."
If You take an H with a Medium Flour you got yourself a winner!

David

