shape
carat
color
clarity

Unhappy with my 3 CT Round Brilliant LGD

Agreeing with Karl also but from an uneducated viewpoint. I think smaller diamonds are often more appealing. The "under one carat" thread is my favorite, I saw so many diamonds that make me gasp.
 
Yes - the graining can cause light scattering which can make a diamond look hazy, milky, cloudy, or blurry.

The graning is minimal. Not enough to affect the light transmission at a human visibility level DJ :)
Looks like a keeper to me - just outside my preferred proportions, but not bad at all!

1746572478791.png
 
I think it needs a good bath and scrubbing. Start there and see if it helps at all. Dawn dishwasher, warm water, and soft
toothbrush.

This ^. It's exactly how I suggest to clean gems.
 
I think it needs a good bath and scrubbing. Start there and see if it helps at all. Dawn dishwasher, warm water, and soft
toothbrush.

Folks have you ever seen a diamond in a ring being retipped?
They go red then white hot.
PLEASE recommend boiling water, ammonia and Dawn!
 
Boiling water - but not in a pot - take the boiling water to a cup with a firm bristle tooth brush

Thank you! I will keep this in mind for cleaning my diamonds. Don't try this for colored gems though, kids. :D
 
Thank you! I will keep this in mind for cleaning my diamonds. Don't try this for colored gems though, kids. :D

Absolutely not - my process:
Clean the all diamonds and all metal (dirt is what makes chains wear out).
Then Rubies and sapphires.
Then Tourmalines, garnets and aquamarine etc - but the water is just finger hot by now.
Emeralds - take the liquid on toothbrush and scrub gently. Rinse under warm tap.
Pat dry.
If you have a steamer or milk frother on real coffee machine, Steam and pat dry.
You can steam a warm emerald but from a distance and holding in fingers so you know its not too hot.
 
Absolutely not - my process:
Clean the all diamonds and all metal (dirt is what makes chains wear out).
Then Rubies and sapphires.
Then Tourmalines, garnets and aquamarine etc - but the water is just finger hot by now.
Emeralds - take the liquid on toothbrush and scrub gently. Rinse under warm tap.
Pat dry.
If you have a steamer or milk frother on real coffee machine, Steam and pat dry.
You can steam a warm emerald but from a distance and holding in fingers so you know its not too hot.

Gary, are you using ammonia on all these things? Which gemstones would you NOT recommend using ammonia with?
 
Gary, are you using ammonia on all these things? Which gemstones would you NOT recommend using ammonia with?

Fracture filled gems.
 
The cleanest I ever saw my diamonds was six parts boiling water, one part household ammonia, and a few drops dawn. I used tbs for the “parts”. It was amazing!

I don’t do it often bc ammonia stinks to high heaven.

Note it will remove “antiquing” paint!
 
Absolutely not - my process:
Clean the all diamonds and all metal (dirt is what makes chains wear out).
Then Rubies and sapphires.
Then Tourmalines, garnets and aquamarine etc - but the water is just finger hot by now.
Emeralds - take the liquid on toothbrush and scrub gently. Rinse under warm tap.
Pat dry.
If you have a steamer or milk frother on real coffee machine, Steam and pat dry.
You can steam a warm emerald but from a distance and holding in fingers so you know its not too hot.

Thank you for this!
 
Gary, are you using ammonia on all these things? Which gemstones would you NOT recommend using ammonia with?

My opinion might be in the minority here, but I don't think there is ever really an occasion where you need to use ammonia. Again, maybe that's because I come from a CS background, and the thought of using something caustic like that terrifies me. For diamonds, perhaps it's ok, but then you still need to be careful not to corrode your precious metals. I always say use the minimum of what you need to clean gems. Dawn (a gentle degreaser), warm water, and a soft brush has always worked wonders for me!
 
The cleanest I ever saw my diamonds was six parts boiling water, one part ammonia, and a few drops dawn. I used tbs for the “parts”. It was amazing!

Note it will remove “antiquing” paint!

And plastic enamel and so common sense (which may be uncommon) is recommended.
My opinion might be in the minority here, but I don't think there is ever really an occasion where you need to use ammonia. Again, maybe that's because I come from a CS background, and the thought of using something caustic like that terrifies me. For diamonds, perhaps it's ok, but then you still need to be careful not to corrode your precious metals. I always say use the minimum of what you need to clean gems. Dawn (a gentle degreaser), warm water, and a soft brush has always worked wonders for me!

Jewelers have used this solution in ultrasonic cleaners for ever Autumn
 
Jewelers have used this solution in ultrasonic cleaners for ever Autumn

Eek... and the ammonia doesn't harm/pit gold or platinum? I was told chlorine would eat away at it over time, so I assumed something as corrosive as ammonia would destroy it. Good to know!
 
Eek... and the ammonia doesn't harm/pit gold or platinum? I was told chlorine would eat away at it over time, so I assumed something as corrosive as ammonia would destroy it. Good to know!

I learned this after a jewler cleaned my diamond ring that had antiquing and some of it came off!
 
I learned this after a jewler cleaned my diamond ring that had antiquing and some of it came off!

Cleans too well, I suppose! I remember way back before I understood about how sterling silver was oxidized, I dipped a piece into one of those silver cleaning solutions. Gone! Lost all of that beautiful detail work. Did you have it reapplied?

Sorry for derailing the thread, OP! This is all good info though at least. lol
 
Cleans too well, I suppose! I remember way back before I understood about how sterling silver was oxidized, I dipped a piece into one of those silver cleaning solutions. Gone! Lost all of that beautiful detail work. Did you have it reapplied?

Sorry for derailing the thread, OP! This is all good info though at least. lol
It was just a small area and I ended up removing all the antiquing.

Before.
IMG_0579.jpeg
After.
IMG_3841.jpeg
 
It was just a small area and I ended up removing all the antiquing.

Before.
IMG_0579.jpeg
After.
IMG_3841.jpeg

Oh my goodness... she's gorgeous. So I've been oxidizing silver for years (using Midas Black Max, but I don't think it or liver of sulfur work on gold). If you ever want to add the antiquing again, use Vigor or Blak-Ox oxidizer. Very simple process... apply, let oxidize (it's almost instantaneous), wash, and then use a gold polishing cloth to remove it from the high points.
 
Oh my goodness... she's gorgeous. So I've been oxidizing silver for years (using Midas Black Max, but I don't think it or liver of sulfur work on gold). If you ever want to add the antiquing again, use Vigor or Blak-Ox oxidizer. Very simple process... apply, let oxidize (it's almost instantaneous), wash, and then use a gold polishing cloth to remove it from the high points.

I prefer it without the antiquing! I made the ring in 2019 and I feel like that was when antiquing was really stylish. Now it’s. It so much and I prefer the bright shine of the engraving. So it’s all good!

Fun to know it can be added back. I did a bunch of research before I removed it. It was funny to learn it’s basically just paint.

I hope OP comes back! We kind of ruined her parade wanting a new diamond. We all just said “yours is nice maybe just clean it better” lol
 
I prefer it without the antiquing! I made the ring in 2019 and I feel like that was when antiquing was really stylish. Now it’s. It so much and I prefer the bright shine of the engraving. So it’s all good!

Fun to know it can be added back. I did a bunch of research before I removed it. It was funny to learn it’s basically just paint.

I hope OP comes back! We kind of ruined her parade wanting a new diamond. We all just said “yours is nice maybe just clean it better” lol

I'm still around LOL! I was just a little shocked by some of the comments. I probably should have started this post by saying look at my existing diamond, can I get one that sparkles more :lol-2:
 
I'm still around LOL! I was just a little shocked by some of the comments. I probably should have started this post by saying look at my existing diamond, can I get one that sparkles more :lol-2:

I guess most people are saying “not really”? Please try to ammonia cleaning and take some more pictures in different lighting. It will help us help you!
 
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