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Would you buy a clarity enhanced diamond?

kmt|1291175932|2783773 said:
Venturing out of lurkdom to ask if anybody's opinion would change if the diamond in question were of a superior cut? For example, an AVC like the one in this video. 1.73 I I1 - was listed for under $5k. http://www.vimeo.com/13036782

My answer would not change - still a resounding no.
 
kmt|1291175932|2783773 said:
Venturing out of lurkdom to ask if anybody's opinion would change if the diamond in question were of a superior cut? For example, an AVC like the one in this video. 1.73 I I1 - was listed for under $5k. http://www.vimeo.com/13036782
why waste $5k??? :confused: buy a nice .90ct instead.
 
Now that's an interesting prospect (the AVC). Typically I associated clarity enhancement with persistence of visible inclusions and poor cut quality. But a clarity-enhanced ideal cut? I'd really think about it. Not for an engagement ring or other sentimental piece, because it wouldn't be mind-clean for me, but if the price were right, I'd probably think about it for a pendant (it would be less vulnerable to damage that way).
 
nope probably not. To me diamonds are special and when they are clarity enhanced it really takes away from it.
 
Re:

Cehrabehra|1274846268|2588572 said:
No, because one of the characteristics I personally prefer is clarity, true clarity. I don''t mind some VS2 10x stuff in there as it is a real stone, but I would rather keep the black boogers in the stone and keep it as it came from the earth. I''m weird that way. I don''t care much about color - D-Z - but I like clarity!

+1
 
A friend of mine has a 2 carat round that had noticable black inclusions (otherwise great stone, lots of brilliance.) She sent it to Yehuda and now it looks amazing. I think you just have to be careful and ask a great deal of questions about the treatment the diamond received and durability. Personally, I'd stay away from Ebay on this one.
 
jstarfireb|1291185453|2783867 said:
Now that's an interesting prospect (the AVC). Typically I associated clarity enhancement with persistence of visible inclusions and poor cut quality. But a clarity-enhanced ideal cut? I'd really think about it. Not for an engagement ring or other sentimental piece, because it wouldn't be mind-clean for me, but if the price were right, I'd probably think about it for a pendant (it would be less vulnerable to damage that way).

This. I wouldn't want one in general - it's a mind clean issue for me... one of the things I like about diamonds is their clarity and I wouldn't want it mucked with. But maybe maybe maybe to get a ridiculously good deal on a superfluous stone... maybe.
 
I wouldn't, there are too many unknowns (will the diamond be durable? how long will the effect of the enhancement last?). I would never ever spend several k$ on a diamond that may break any other day...it's just not worth taking the risk.
 
kmt|1291175932|2783773 said:
Venturing out of lurkdom to ask if anybody's opinion would change if the diamond in question were of a superior cut? For example, an AVC like the one in this video. 1.73 I I1 - was listed for under $5k. http://www.vimeo.com/13036782
Personally, I've often wondered why they aren't ALL superior cut. The usual reason to cut a stone wil less than fabulous cutting is because the resultant stone is bigger and there's less 'waste' of the original rough. That is to say that a piece of rough that will cut spectacular 0.85ct stone may cut a 1.10 turnip. Since rough is pretty expensive, and stones over a carat sell for a premium because of the weight, it makes a certain amount of since to accept a discount for a crappy cut in exchange for a premium on these other things. The lower the grade gets, the less this matters. An I3/I round on Rap goes from 1100/ct to 1200/ct when it passes a 1.0ct mark for example. VS1/E goes from 6900/ct to 10500/ct over the same boundary. At the same time, the biggest impediment to selling low grades is that they often aren't very pretty. Good cutting helps a lot on this front and dispite the Internet style of buying paper instead of diamonds, there are still a lot of people out there who walk into a store and buy the prettiest one they can afford with an eye toward the biggest size. Killer cuts on low grades seems taylor made for this market.
 
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