CTsparkle13
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2013
- Messages
- 150
Gypsy|1463427940|4032377 said:
diamondseeker2006|1463430413|4032397 said:Always look at diameter measurements. With a thick girdle or greater depth, you may have a stone that faces up like a lower weight stone. Your depth percent above has a typ0, by the way.
Post the video if you want feedback. Good Old Gold is very good at calling in fancy cuts and checking light return.
Gypsy,Gypsy|1463429601|4032392 said:1. You cannot buy a radiant by the numbers. They are nothing like rounds. So posting just a lab report is meaningless.
2. No labs grade radiants for cut.
3. Vendor cut grades and scores are meaningless. So 'ideal' or 'excellent' ratings by vendors are actually more harmful than helpful.
4. You have to buy from performance and faceting.
5. That means pictures, videos and ASETs. ONLY followed by your own evaluation with your eyes once you see it.
6. Do not limit your options by table or depth. It's a waste of time with radiants. They have different facet patterns and the tables and depths can really be ANYTHING and still end up with a wonderful stone. Any one that advises you differently, except with respect to how depth affects spread, is full of it
The entire purpose of faceting a diamond is to reflect light.
How well or how poorly a diamond does this determines how beautiful it is.
How well a diamond performs is determined by the angles and cutting. This is why we say cut is king. With fancies though (anything other than a round brilliant), that is a little complicated. But no other factor: not color, not clarity has as much of an impact on the appearance of a diamond as its cut. Numbers tell you nothing about a Radiants however.
But if the numbers don't help you, how do you evaluate the cut of fancies? Well, the answer to that is light performance and faceting.
So what you need is a way to check actual light performance of your actual stone.
That's what an ASET image does. http://www.highperformancediamonds.com/index.php?page=education-performance Please read.
And ASET shows you how and wear your diamond is reflecting light, how well it is going at it, and where you are losing light return That is why you won't see us recommending vendors like Blue Nile, as they do not provide images or ASET images for their diamonds. James Allen can do this, though not with all their stones. Good Old Gold and Brilliantly Engaged does this. So do Brian Gavin and Whiteflash and High Performance Diamonds, but they have to call fancies in, as they do not stock them regularly.
The only stats worth noting are:
Avoid very thin girdles.
And if the depth is very deep (for radiants high sixties and low seventies are normal. Anything over that is overly deep) it will affect spread. Which is why I you have to watch the spread not the carat weight.
The rest... meaningless. You can get a nice radiant with just about any combo of depth and table. And polish is nice to stick to Very Good, but I wouldn't kick a stone out because it has only good polish. And symmetry... not very important at all in Radiants.
You need to shop for BRIGHT stones with facets that are crisp and light up and flash well as they move. That is why we kike to see videos.
diamondseeker2006|1463433595|4032415 said:It's okay, but it is very hard to find great radiants. You could ask for an ASET on it. I like to see defined facet patterns. These are not rectangular, but they are examples of better cut radiants (all would need ASETs to see light return):
http://www.jamesallen.com/loose-diamonds/radiant-cut/1.51-carat-g-color-vs2-clarity-sku-586205
http://www.jamesallen.com/loose-diamonds/radiant-cut/1.66-carat-g-color-vvs2-clarity-sku-374603
http://www.jamesallen.com/loose-diamonds/radiant-cut/1.50-carat-g-color-vs2-clarity-sku-368836
http://www.jamesallen.com/loose-diamonds/radiant-cut/1.67-carat-h-color-vs1-clarity-sku-368826
http://www.goodoldgold.com/diamond-search/1.53-Radiant-N-AGS-G-VS2-diamond-stock-12189-cert- (love Lucere radiants)