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Hen with Sapphire Pendant : The Lost Jewelled Egg

1886 Hen with Sapphire PendantThe Hen with Sapphire Pendant is one of jewelled Easter egg made and under the supervision of the famous Russian jeweller named Peter Carl Fabergé in 1886. This pendant is for the Tsar, Alexander III of Russia. It was a present of Alexander III to his wife, Tsarina Maria Feodorovna. It is also, the one of eight eggs which are currently lost. This jewelled easter eggs was made by Fabergé for the Russian Tsars between 1885 and 1917. The eggs are made-up of precious metals/hard stones that are decorated with the combinations of enamel and gemstone. The term "Fabergé Egg"' become a synonym of luxury and the eggs are regarded as masterpieces of the jeweler's art.

List of Fabergé Eggs made by Peter Carl Fabergé.

More of the jeweled eggs (whereabouts of these Fabergé Eggs) on this link.
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Russel Simmons selling bling for African people

The fashion mogul and hip-hop Russell Simmons said that he's selling blings and diamonds to help raise money for the development and empowerment of Africans. - NEW YORK

49-year-old entrepreneur declared his "Green Initiative" jewelry, which was manufactured and designed by Simmons Jewelry Co. Twenty-five percent of proceeds from the sales will go towards the Diamond Empowerment Fund, that will support institutions, like schools and colleges, in South Africa and Botswana and help in economic development.

His recent visit to South Africa and Botswana to tour diamond mines and factories coincides with efforts by human rights groups to raise awareness about the so-called conflict diamonds, which have fueled and funded wars in Africa. Fighting forces sell the gems to raise funds for weapons. Millions have been killed in Angola, Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The president of Simmons Jewelry Co., Scott Rauch said the company's diamonds are blood conflict-free.

"Our purpose was to see how we could have an affect on the diamond industry," he told a packed news conference Tuesday...

Source: FoxNews
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The Country of Poverty and Diamonds : Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone SoldiersPOPULATION: 5.7 million.

CAPITAL: Freetown.

THE ECONOMY: Gold, bauxite, titanium ore and especially diamonds are about two-thirds of foreign exchange income before war and instability wrecked their economy. Only in June this year, experts said that Sierra Leone has made little progress in tackling corruption and has squandered foreign aid, leaving its most vulnerable citizens as destitute as they were before the civil war ended.

Electricity and piped water mains are very rare even in the shanty towns that make up the Freetown.

Few of paved roads in the rest of the country, and 70 percent of the country's population survives on less than $1 a day.

ETHNICITY: The Temne & Mende each takes almost one-third of the population. Lokko, Sherbro, Limba, Susso, Fulani, Kono and Krio are other country's popular groups.

RELIGION: Mostly, the people practices traditional African religions. One-third of which are Muslims, who live mainly in the north and catholic minority is just concentrated in the capital.

LANGUAGE: English is the official language but Temne, Mende and Krio (Creole) are also spoken. Krio serves as the commercial language in the capital.

GEOGRAPHY: Sierra Leone is about 71,740 sq km (27,699 sq miles). It borders the Atlantic Ocean to the west, Guinea to the north and east and Liberia to the southeast. The climate is tropical.

SOME OF COUNTRY'S POPULAR HISTORY: It won independence from Britain in 1961 and suffered years of dictatorship, coup attempts and corrupt rule.

-- President Siaka Stevens made the country a one-party state in 1978, quit in 1985 aged 80 and chose former army chief Joseph Momoh as successor.

-- Foday Sankoh's Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebelled against Momoh in 1991, starting a decade of war that ended in early 2002 after an estimated 50,000 people were killed.

-- Having been deposed once in 1997 by a coalition of army officers led by Major-General Johnny Paul Koroma and the RUF, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah was re-elected in May 2002. The RUF, standing as a political party, won little support in the ballot.

-- A Special Court for Sierra Leone was set up jointly by the country's government and the United Nations in 2002 to try those most responsible for human rights violations during the later stages of the civil war.

-- In July 2007 Sierra Leone's war crimes court sentenced three rebel militia leaders to long jail terms for "some of the most heinous, brutal and atrocious crimes ever recorded". In August it convicted two former leaders of a pro-government militia of murder and other crimes. Rebel leaders are on trial.

-- The August 11 parliamentary polls were won by the opposition All People's Congress with 59 of the 112 seats. The Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) of outgoing President Tejan Kabbah, which dominated the last parliament, won 43 seats. The PMDC, a breakaway of the SLPP, took the remaining 10.


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The Diamond Simulants : "Looks-like" of the Real Diamonds

cubic zirconiaDiamond simulant are the imitation and referring to any stone material that has the appearance of diamond but it does not posess the characteristics, atomic structure, chemical composition or physical properties of natural (true) diamond. Common simulants like Cubic Zirconia, Color less Synthetic Corundum (sapphire), Synthetic Spinel, Strontium Titanate, Yttrium Aluminium Garnet (YAG), Gadolinium Gallium Garnet (GGG), and Glass (Paste).



Diamond Simulants Subcategories:

1. Gems - the stones that are natural with the same appearance like of the diamond. Examples of this stones are sapphire, topaz, beryl, quartz, zircon; all of these gemstones in their colorless
forms.

2. Natural Synthetics - These are were the manufactured stones that have the same chemical composition, atomic structure, and physical properties of a natural counterpart. They are man-made, which includes: Synthetic Rutile, Synthetic Sapphire, and Synthetic Spinel.

3. Artificial Synthetics - These are the manufactured stones that have no natural counterpart, which include: Strontium Titanate, Yttrium Aluminate (YAG) and Cubic Zirconia.

4. Composites - Stones that are created from more than one stone to enhance particular properties. For example glass which is very soft which prevent the surface from scratching a layer of harder material was bonded to the surface. These stones are also known as doublets.

The reason why this simulants was created for over the years because diamond is so desirable yet so expensive. These are more affordable to buy than the real thing and to the untrained eye look almost the same. Diamond simulants ("look alikes") are not the same as synthesized diamonds. Due to its low cost and very close visual likeness to diamond, cubic zirconia has remained the most gemologically and economically important diamond simulant since 1976.

Current popular diamond simulants include cubic zirconia (CZ) and moissanite. Technically they are not diamonds, artificial or otherwise. Recently the trend has been to market these simulants less as artificial or synthetic diamonds and more as new gems in their own right. Of course, natural diamond remains a wonderful luxury item - if you can afford it.
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Martini garnished with Diamonds

diamond martiniThis new called "diamond-tini" is garnished with a 1.06-carat sparkler and a registered price tag of $15,000, according to Reuters reports. Guests at the Ritz-Carlton in Tokyo can now order a cocktail that is made from this item.

Bernard Viola, the hotel's manager told the Reuters News service. "It's a timeless drink and diamonds are a girl's best friend, so you combine both this time of year in Japan when proposals are rampant."

This extravagant vodka martini is prepared for tableside to a serenade of the Shirley Bassey hit "Diamonds Are Forever." The diamond garnish is later set in a ring by the local jeweler.

No diamond-tinis have been sold yet, but Viola is confident that the hotel's bartenders will be able to sell at least three a month.

"There is a market for everything you create," he said. "Today it is all about luxury."
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A largest D-color Flawless Diamond

color d flawless diamondThis brilliant cut D-color flawless diamond weighing 84.37 carats displays during a preview at Sotheby's auction house in Geneva....Sold on Nov. 14 at an auction called ‘Magnificent Jewels’ in Geneva.

This has to be the largest D-color flawless diamond on auction and this breathtaking cut will oblige everyone for its estimated cost worth US$15 to 16 million (euro 10.5-11.2 million).


Definition of D-color:
Diamonds are graded by color, starting at D and to Z. The fact that this colorless stones are graded D, which are treasured for their value and rarity, and highest on the Diamond Quality Pyramid.


This diamonds appear colorless, and may actually have slight yellow or brown tones. The color grades include P and Q, and although it appears to be beautiful, they are less rare and therefore less valuable. To appreciate this simple beauty of each individual stone, you should contrast diamonds side by side with a jeweler.


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Faux Diamonds

Although Phoenix Diamonds are REAL, the fakes are very good - but just not real diamonds

Moissanite is silicon carbide and is used in jewellery, it is called Moissanite after the jewel's discoverer Dr. Henri Moissan.

Moissanite is somewhat similar to diamond in several important respects: it is transparent and hard (9, although a patent states 8.5-9.0, on the Mohs scale compared to 10 for diamond), with a refractive index between 2.65 and 2.69 (compared to 2.42 for diamond). Moissanite is somewhat harder than common cubic zirconium.

Unlike diamond, Moissanite is strongly birefringent. This quality is desirable in some optical applications, but not in gemstones. For this reason, Moissanite jewels are cut along the optic axis of the crystal to minimize birefringent effects. It is lighter (density 3.22 vs. 3.56), and much more resistant to heat. This results in a stone of higher lustre, sharper facets and good resilience. Loose moissanite stones may be placed directly into ring moulds; unlike diamond, which burns at 800 °C, moissanite remains undamaged by temperatures up to twice the 900 °C melting point of 18k gold.

In 1998, Charles & Colvard introduced jewel-quality synthetic silicon carbide to the market under the name "moissanite". This gemstone possesses superior fire and brilliance to diamonds. Upon introduction, some jewellers misidentified moissanite as diamond. Moissanite's thermal conductivity is very close to that of diamond, rendering useless the older thermal testers that they relied upon. Moissanite has a slightly higher index of refraction (brilliance) and much greater dispersion (fire) than diamond, as it shows many more "flashes" of colour than a diamond. Unlike cubic zirconia and other diamond simulants, moissanite does not cloud over time, and is extremely durable.

Once its properties are known, moissanite is easy to distinguish from diamond, as it is doubly refractive and has a very slight green, yellow, or grey fluorescence under ultraviolet light. Because the brilliance of the moissanite helps to cancel the perceived colour, cuts with higher brilliance tend to have a much "whiter appearance" (i.e., round brilliant, square brilliant, and cushion cut) versus cuts that have a lower refractive index such as the marquise, radiant and especially the pear-shaped cut. The colour is often defined as "near colourless" which on the diamond colour scale ranges from G through J.

Charles & Colvard markets moissanite primarily to self-purchasing women. However, moissanite engagement rings, eternity bands and circle pendants have become popular among value-conscious consumers. For example, in the trade, a 1-carat (200 mg) moissanite gem sells for about $500 (2007 USD), while a diamond of similar size and colour typically sells for $4500 or more.

Natural canary coloured diamonds sell for around $9000/crt while pink can reach $100,000 depending on the four C's...........

Basic extract from Wikipedia

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$10.4 million worth for one of the Huge Rough Diamond

huge rough diamondSold at $10.4 million, one of the largest rough diamonds is expected to be transformed into a polished stone of more than 100 carats. The huge 493-carat rough diamond from Lesotho, the 18th largest ever recovered in the world, was sold to Graff Jewelers of London at a tender in Antwerp.

Miner Gem Diamonds explained that the diamond recovered at Letseng le Terai mine in September, was sold for an expensive price of $21,000 per carat, against a global average diamond price of $81 per carat. The largest rough quality-gem diamond ever found was the Cullinan Diamond, found in South Africa in 1905, at 3,106.75 carats. "The Letseng Legacy was named to reflect the growing legacy that the Letseng le Terai mine is creating as a producer of significant diamonds," Gem Diamonds said in a statement.

Letseng Diamonds, 70 percent owned by Gem Diamonds and 30 percent owned by the government of Lesotho, has now produced three of the world's top 20 diamonds, including the 603-carat Lesotho Promise. Graff Jewelers were also the winning bidder for the Lesotho Promise in 2006. A brilliant-cut white diamond, which weighs 84.37 carats, was sold at an auction in Geneva on Wednesday for nearly 18.2 million Swiss francs ($16.21 million) to Guess Jeans founder Georges Marciano, Sotheby's said. That diamond was the second most expensive stone ever sold at auction, eclipsed only by the 100.10 carat "Star of the Season" diamond, which went for $16.5 million in May 1995.
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A Tea-colored Diamond Found in the Park

tea colored diamondChad Johnson, found a diamond at Crater of Diamonds State Park, and he almost threw away his precious find. A cube-shaped rock that have been plucked out of his sifters, turned to be a 4.38-carat, tea-colored diamond.

Chad, 36, made the dig on Saturday at the park and left his equipment in a locker. When he came back Monday morning, he made the discovery. Crater of Diamonds State Park, which opened in 1972, the world's only diamond-producing site open to the public, and visitors can keep the gems they gather. The largest diamond found at the park was the 16.37-carat Amarillo Starlight, a white diamond found in 1975.

Johnson discovered the second-largest diamond at the park this year. In June, a Louisiana man found a 4.8-carat stone. More than 700 diamonds have been found there this year. Since moving to Arkansas from Iowa in February, Johnson said, he was living off money made by selling diamonds. He only recently took a job at a convenience store, partly because he "got tired of selling diamonds to make ends meet."

Park officials declined to speculate how much money Johnson could get for the diamond. Johnson suggested he expects much more than what he is used to getting. "If someone offers me that much money, it's theirs," Johnson said. - MURFREESBORO, Arkansas.
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The First Makers of Man-made Diamonds

Von PlatenBaltzar von Platen


In 1949, ASEA hired a team of five scientists and engineers, headed by Erik Lunblad. The top secret project was called Quintus and Von Platen's laboratory became known as Quintuslaboratorium. Von Platen, an extraordinary man who had invented the fridge (refrigerator). That is why ASEA took him seriously. His dream was nothing less than to invent a machine that could make Koh-i-Noor diamonds.

The scientists from General Electric, in 1950's were not the only ones that try to make diamonds. In a magnificent old hunting palace on the outskirts of Stockholm, the Swedish electrical company ASEA had already been funding an eccentric independent scientist called Baltzar von Platen to look into making diamonds

Like GE, Von Platen's team knew that high pressure and high temperature was needed to break graphite's atomic bonds. And like General Electric, they too had a difficult time in making a machine stronger enough to create those conditions. Their diamond press was made of a completely different design. It had six pyramid-shaped anvils, which when pressed together formed a sphere around a sample of graphite. The whole structure was encased in a strong copper jacket and suspended in an alchohol-filled tank at 6000 atmospheres of pressure. But it was highly dangerous.

If a leak appeared, it would create a high-velocity alcohol jet capable of drilling right through a hand. The whole device was capable of producing over 50,000 atmospheres and the graphite sample was surrounded by thermite which, although it could raise the temperature by 2000°C, was unstable and, combined with the alcohol, potentially explosive.

Von Platen made sure that the most valuable members of the team left the room when the press was operating. The problem for the Swedish team was that their machine was so complicated that every time they put the apparatus under pressure and something broke, it took a whole day to unravel and rebuild it. Eventually they too realised that by adding iron carbide to the graphite sample it lowered graphite's melting point and that as more and more graphite was dissolved in the metal, it became saturated. They were sure that they had cracked the theory of making diamonds.

On February 16th 1953, nearly a year before General Electric, Erik Lundblad ran the high pressure press at 83,000 atmospheres and about 2000°C for a full hour. On unwrapping the carbon parcel, he was astonished - he found diamond crystals, no bigger than grains of sand. Unfortunately for Von Platen, ASEA decided to keep the experiment a secret in case a competitor stole their secret, and the experiment was not duplicated or published - a condition of recognition for scientific inventions - until after General Electric's announcement.

As a result the world has never officially recognised that it was Von Platen's team who in fact had made the first synthetic diamond.
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Lesotho Promise : The Giant Diamond Ever Found

Lesotho Promise DiamondThe biggest diamond to be found in 13 years, the "Lesotho Promise," was sold at an auction for more than $12 million and is expected to be sold in excess of $20 million once it is cut up. - ANTWERP, Belgium.

The 603-carat (120 gram) diamond, named after the tiny African mountain kingdom where it was found, went under the hammer at the Antwerp Diamond Centre and was sold to the South African Diamond Corporation, owner of luxury jewellers Graff.


The 10th largest white diamond ever to be found, it will be cut into a large heart-shaped diamond and several smaller stones which will then be sold. The uncut diamond is a third bigger than a golf ball.

Johnny Kneller from the South African Diamond Corporation said that once it was cut up, he expected to sell the stones for a third more than the auction price.

"We can't say for sure but we hope it's going to sold over $20 million," Kneller said.

Diamonds have long been a status symbol and were famously serenaded as as a girl's best friend by Marilyn Monroe in the 1950s film "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes".

Growing affluence has boosted sales and busy shopping streets such as London's Bond Street are awash with jewellers and luxury goods stores offering right-hand diamond rings for well-heeled women.

The biggest rough diamond ever found was the Cullinan at 3,106 carats, while the second largest, the Excelsior, was 995 carats. Both were found in South Africa.

The Lesotho diamond was found at the Letseng Diamond Mine high in the mountains of the tiny nation which is surrounded by South Africa, by a woman who was sorting through the rocks.

"She started screaming and all the staff thought she had been electrocuted," said Clifford Elphick, head of Gem Diamond Mining, which owns 70 percent of the mine.

He said he was very pleased with the price that the gem had been sold.
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The International Cremation & Burial Exhibition


Hilton Newcastle Gateshead Hotel, Bottle Bank, Gateshead, NE8 2AR
Telephone [44] (0) 191 490 9700

Yeh, I know it sound bizarre, but there is probably a conference and exhibition for almost every single subject on the planet and death, funerals, cremations and the like are no exception.

We'll be exhibiting there on the 12th of November to the 14th, I hope anyone reading this will come to the event and view our Memorial Diamonds at first hand.

We will be showing for the first time our new BLUE DIAMOND range - admittedly a lot more expensive than the Canary Yellows and using more ashes, but the Blue Diamonds are stunning.

In the near future, we will be installing a new laser inscriber to mark all the new laboratory created range and if required - special messages.
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Raining Diamonds in Uranus and Neptune

uranus atmosphere seen on voyagerUranus seen through the space shuttle voyager 2

The said planets contain a high amounts of methane, which the UC Berkeley researchers now shown can turn into diamond at very high temperatures and pressures found inside these planets.



uranus planetExperiments done at the University of California, Berkeley, are the indication of future explorers of our solar system that they may find diamonds falling down through the atmospheres of Neptune and Uranus. Berkeley - October 1, 1999


"Once the diamonds form, they will fall like raindrops or hailstones toward the center of the planet," explained by Laura Robin Benedetti, graduate student in physics at UC Berkeley.

The team, led by Benedetti and Raymond Jeanloz, professor of geology and geophysics, produced these conditions inside a diamond anvil cell, squeezing liquid methane to several hundred thousand times atmospheric pressure. When focused a laser beam on the pressurized liquid, heating it to some 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit, diamond dust appeared.

They report their experimental findings in a paper in the Oct. 1 issue of Science. The demonstration that methane can convert to diamond as well as other complex hydrocarbons in the interiors of giant planets like Neptune hint at a complex chemistry inside gaseous planets and even brown dwarf stars. Brown dwarfs are small, dim stars barely larger than the largest gas giant planets.

"This is opening the door to study of the interesting types of chemical reactions taking place inside planets and brown dwarfs," Jeanloz said. "Now that technology is able to reproduce the high pressures and temperatures found there, we are getting much better quality information on the chemical reactions taking place under these conditions."

"It is not amazing that chemistry like this happens inside planets, it's just that most people haven't dealt with the chemical reactions that can occur," Benedetti said. "The interior of these planets may be much more complicated that our current picture."

A simple calculation, for example, shows that the energy released by diamonds settling to the planet's core could account for the excess heat radiated by Neptune, that is, the heat given off by Neptune in excess of what it receives from the sun.

"What's exciting to us is the application of this high-pressure chemistry to understanding the outer planets," Jeanloz said.

"As more planets are found in unexpected orbits around other stars, the effects of internal chemical processes will need to be further clarified in order to obtain a general understanding of planet formation and evolution," the authors concluded in the Science paper.












Possible structure of Neptune


Our solar system's other gas giant planets, Jupiter and Saturn may also contain diamonds produced under such conditions, though they contain proportionately less methane than Neptune and Uranus. Based on theoretical calculations, Neptune and Uranus are estimated to contain about 10 to 15 percent methane under an outer atmosphere of hydrogen and helium. (See the above image for presumed internal structure of Neptune)

Several groups of researchers have suggested that the methane in these planets could conceivably turn into diamond at fairly shallow depths, about one tenth of the way to the center. Nearly two decades ago, a group at Lawrence Livermore National laboratory shocked some methane and reported the formation of diamond before the stuff evaporated. That group was led by retired scientist Marvin Ross and researchers William Nellis and Francis Ree.

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How are Diamonds Created or Formed?

diamonds originThe Origin of Diamonds...

The largest body of water, the oceans, had microorganisms that lived and died millions of years ago. When they died there bodies fell into the ocean floor. After that, the bodies decomposed, and what's left was almost pure carbon. Then the crust of the earth surface is in constant motion. The movement is due to what you call the tectonic plates and the continental drift.

When one of the tectonic plates were pushed under another the bodies of the microorganism, now carbon, that is also buried under tons of rock. The carbon is subject to extreme pressures by the rock pressing down upon it and by extreme heat, which is ranging between 1100 to 1400 degrees Celsius. If the carbon being acted upon is pure then the diamond will be colorless which is normal for diamonds. If nitrogen or sulphur is also included in the carbon then some color may be added to the diamond. This process preserves the unique crystal structure that makes diamonds the hardest natural material known. The arrangement of the atoms causes the diamonds to have tighter atoms than any other substance in the world.

When volcanoes erupted, this microorganisms, which are now diamonds, are forced to the service. Conventional diamonds are mined from explosive volcanic rocks (kimberlites) that transport them from depths in excess of 100 kilometers by volcanic action.

Man Made, in the year 2004 scientists from Carnegie Institution's Geophysical Laboratory managed to produce gems that are harder than any other crystals. These man made diamonds were produced using a gas mixture. The crystals that were produced were so hard that the instruments and other paraphernalia used to make them broke. The great part about these man made diamonds is they were created in less than a day. Put pure carbon under enough heat and pressure, about 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit and 50,000 atmospheres and it will crystallize into the hardest material known. That is a very simplistic view and also very hard to do. Modern methods use a very complicated process that requires the crystals to be grown using a special high growth-rate chemical vapor deposition.

Then the crystals were exposed to very high pressure and temperatures make them even harder. There is then a production of a chemical reaction that yields what is called carbon rain. The carbon rain atoms arrange themselves in the same structure as the container or seed used to catch the carbon rain. As they arrange themselves into a tight composition, they turn into man-made diamonds. Most of the man made diamonds are yellow in color. This is due to the chemicals used in the creation process. Man-made diamonds are very difficult to distinguish from natural ones. A trained jeweler could tell the difference if he could detect the different growth patterns and the lack of inclusions. Inclusions are the tiny bits of material that are usually imbedded in a natural diamond and are considered a flaw.
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Diamonds Latest Discovery : 4-Billion-Year-Old Diamonds

4 billion year-old diamonds


A scientific discovery that startled the journalists proclaiming “that diamonds really are forever.”







Discovered in western Australia recently the Micro-slivers of diamonds that are 4 billion years old, or within 300 million years of the Earth's formation. These diamonds, are no no thicker than a hair and of no use in jewelry, are 1 billion years older than the diamonds previously thought to be the world's oldest, and scientists use them to uncover clues and discover about the earth's formation. The diamonds were found in zircon crystals, which, scientists said, that is not to be confused with cubic zirconia...

More Discounted diamonds and jewelries on Diamond Jewelry site
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The New World's Largest Diamond

new world's largest diamond
The stone shown in picture is perfect octahedron, and also exceedingly rare. Readers who saw pictures of it through a link on the JCKonline guessed it as a “garnet,” “topaz,” or “big chunk of green glass.”



A reported record-holder 8,000 ct. diamond that made headlines around the world—but later was revealed to be a hoax. The stone, discovered in South Africa, was said to be more than double the weight of the 3,100 ct. Cullinan, considered the world's largest.

The spokesman for diamond's owner, Brett Jolly (South African businessman), told JCK the man described it “as most beautiful perfect in shape, color, and clarity he has never seen before. It breaks all the rules when it comes to the diamond industry.”


The story began to unravel when Jolly went to test the store, accompanied by Melody Brandon, a reporter from the Johannesburg Sunday Times. Brandon, who was blindfolded for part of the journey, had a diamond tester from Ernie Blom, the South Africa–based president of the World Federation of Diamond Bourses, who was brought in to authenticate the stone.

But when they met Andre Harding, Jolly's business partner and owner of the land where the stone was supposedly found, he wouldn't let them use Blom's tester, saying it “wouldn't work.” Brandon briefly held the stone and found it “too light” for a diamond. “It had bubbles in it,” she says. When Harding tested the stone with his own device, Brandon noticed it still had its cap on and was set to “manual,” so he could manipulate it.

When Harding was confronted about this, he “turned pale,” Brandon says, “and went on this ramble that he had to speak to his lawyer.” Then Jolly and Harding got into a screaming match, leaving Brandon briefly stranded in the middle of nowhere.

Jolly, who did not return calls from JCK once the hoax was revealed, has told the media he will press charges and that he believes the actual stone was stolen. “This poor man still believes there is a stone out there somewhere,” Brandon says. Blom has disassociated himself from the story. “Something just wasn't right,” he says.

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Flawless 2007 : A Diamond Movie Review

flawless 2007 movie
Based on actual events, the tense crime thriller stars Michael Caine as the scheming maintenance man who longs to relieve his employers at the London Diamond Corporation of their valuable inventory, and Demi Moore as the savvy executive...


A movie directed by Michael Radford (Il Postino and The Merchant of Venice) and screenwriter Edward Anderson.

A diamond movie about an aging janitor and an American executive who form an unlikely alliance in order to carry out an elaborate jewel heist. The film is set in the 1960's and about a janitor (Michael Caine) who is set to retire. However, he does not want to leave empty handed. He asks his co worker, an American executive (Demi Moore) to help him steal diamonds from the company they work. The London Diamond Corporation.


Great Discounts of Diamonds, Jewelry and watches...









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Diamond Buying Future

diamond's online buying futureAn interesting news Forbes has on the rise on one of popular internet diamond retailer. The diamond dealers, which made headlines when the sold a single diamond for $1.5 million earlier this year, has been a hit with male buyers seeking to avoid the hard sell and intimidation that can be found at some online jewelry retail stores. One of the major appeals of the websites (online jewelers) is its user-friendly factor. Read up on diamonds and see what to look for choosing cut, size, color and clarity watching the numbers rise and fall as you adjust the factors at different rates. A pretty engaging experience.

What the Forbes article doesn't mention is that the folks at this online jeweler often don't actually see the stone. The rings are typically less expensive than traditional bricks-and-mortar stores which have a much higher overhead. This online jewelry site has a network of dealers that work through a web-based diamond exchange. The stones are often shipped directly from these dealers without being inspected by an Online Jeweler. Most of the time this is not a problem but Judah Gutwein of Excel Diamonds writing for Diamond Vues profiled some of the potential risks of this situation describing a situation in which a customer did not receive the diamonds she had ordered. Buying through a middleman such other online jewelers can lead to a more circuitous route of recovery when there are problems, reports of such troubles are relatively small.

The future of the diamond industry does appear to be a more open and honest one. The Diamond man Martin Rapaport had recently held his first of a monthly internet auction of stones. His goal is to bring open pricing to the diamond market and he has been working to create both a futures exchange and a fair trade system for diamonds. The future of diamond buying looks a lot more transparent and less shrouded in secrecy and mystery than it has been in the past.

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A new urn for pets or a baby


Another hand made, truly special urn by John Ditchfield , cream white opaque and seems to have a gold inlaid, a small urn for a pet or ashes of a baby.

We offer this unique, signed and numbered urn for £395
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John Ditchfield Cremation Urn


This is an amazing creation from John Ditchfield, a world class glass artist. The colours are spectacular and the urn is totally unique and hand made, signed and numbered.

Offered for the special price of £580
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John Ditchfield Cremation Ash Urns

This is a beautiful hand blown urn by John, we took it to the 'Death Show' in Southampton and it is offered at the special price of £580

For more details just give us a call
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Jeff Koons’ Biggest Blue Diamond

biggest blue diamond artworkJeff Koons’ Biggest Blue Diamond, displayed in the plaza
outside Christie's in New York.


An eight-foot high simulation of a blue diamond by the American artist Jeff Koons has a display in New York ahead of its sale.

The diamond is actually made of polished steel and chromium, a key item in Christie's auction of contemporary art. It is expected to raise up to $20m. The figure is really ambitious, that would quadruple overnight the current record set for Koons work of art, a ceramic statue of Michael Jackson and his pet monkey Bubbles that goes $5.6m six years ago. But the art market is so buoyant, flush with Russian and Far Eastern money, that even great sales expectations are regularly exceeded. In May Andy Warhol's painting Green Car Crash (Green Burning Car I) sold for $71.7m as part of a Christie's auction that broke the highest pre-sale estimates by $80m.

Blue Diamond is part of Koons's Celebration series begun in 1994 that marks the commercialisation of birthdays, holidays, Valentine's Day and Easter. Three other Koons "diamonds" - in red, pink and green - are in private collections; and a fifth version in yellow is under way.
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The Allnatt Diamond : A Large Fancy Vivid Yellow Diamond

allnatt diamondAllnatt Diamond, an extraordinarily rare 101.29 carat stone is named after former British owner, Major Alfred Ernest Allnatt. There are fewer than a dozen known diamonds that weigh over 100 carats and have strong yellow color, and even fewer that attain vivid grade. It is no surprise, therefore, that the Allnatt commanded the fourth highest auction record price for a single yellow diamond. Experts believe that the likely source of the Allnatt is the De Beers mine in South Africa.


GIA Color Grade: Fancy Vivid yellow
GIA Clarity Grade: VS2
Weight: 101.29 carats
Owner: SIBA Corporation

Porter Rhodes travelled to the Isle of Wight in 1881 to display his fine white diamond crystal to their Queen Victoria and Empress Eugénie of France, who was at that time residing nearby, he helped to break a myth that South African diamonds that were usually yellowish in color and therefore less valuable. Both the Queen but in particular the Empress, who was knowledgable about diamonds, believed this to be true and were, therefore, surprised to examine a fine white octahedral crystal originating from Cape Mines of South Africa. It was not until the Excelsior was found in 1893, the Jubilee in 1895 and above all, the discovery of the Premier Mine in 1902 that South Africa finally achieved recognition as a source of large white diamonds as well as yellow ones.

The early years of the South African diamond mining industry certainly witnessed the appearance, in unheard of numbers, of large yellow crystals, many of them octahedral in shape. The reigning Shah of Persia, Nasir ud-Din Shah (1848-1860) was among the first to appreciate them because he added numerous yellow diamonds to the Crown Jewels of Iran, the largest of which is a 135-carat monster rivalling the Regent Diamond in size and shape. A few, including the Tiffany Yellow, came from the Kimberly Mine but by far the greatest number originated in the De Beers Mine, which is the most likely source the Allnatt originated from.

This 101.29-carat cushion cut its color having been certified by the GIA as Fancy Vivid Yellow, VS2 clarity, is named after its former owner, Alfred Ernest Allnatt. He wa a soldier, a sportsman, an active patron of the arts and a noted benefactor in many spheres. He paid a then world record price for The Adoration of the Magi by Rubens which he presented to King's College, Cambridge, England, as an alterpiece for its famous chapel. He also had a passion for the Turf and bought 11 yearlings formerly owned by the late Sir Sultan Mohammed Aga Khan; he commented at the time, "All I know about horses is they are nice things to amble about on." The Aga Khan also owned several exceptional diamonds, among them the 33.13-carat pear-shaped Aga Khan III, which came up for sale at Christie's in Geneva in May of 1988.

Major Allnatt did not buy any of the Aga Khan's diamonds to add to his yearlings, but he did purchase this very fine diamond and in the early-1950s he commissioned Cartier to design a floral brooch setting for it. The piece is a design of a flower with five petals, lined with white baguette-cut diamonds, the petals themselves being comprised of brilliant cut diamonds, and the stem and two leaves also being comprised of the same cutting styles. The Allnatt is at the center of the flower. The entire piece is made of platinum. It was auctioned by Christies, again in Geneva, in May of 1996. On that occasion it fetched the phenomenal sum of $3,043,496. The present owner of the gem is the SIBA Corporation. The stone originally weighied 102.07 carats but was recut in the late-1990s to its present weight, improving its color from Fancy Intense to Fancy Vivid Yellow.
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Buying Diamonds Rings and Earrings Online

diamond ringThe WWW (internet) are a very good source for lots of gem accessories like diamond rings and earrings available for sale to anyone who wants to buy, or even just to simply looking (browsing) and see what is out there. Diamond rings have long been coveted for their elegance and worth. For some, the diamond ring is a status symbol, and somebody can afford to wear something this beautiful and attractive ring. Diamond rings are indeed beautiful, which is part of why they are so valuable. In addition to their beauty, diamonds are rare and difficult to harvest. The combination of a diamond with the craftsmanship of a fine ring is a sight to be hold, where the whole of the ring is worth more than the sum of its parts.


Buying a diamonds (rings and earrings) online requires some very basic knowledge in order to make sure you are getting a good deal. Personal taste is totally subjective, each person likes different things, but the components of a diamond ring don’t change. The diamond itself must be understood. You should familiarize the Diamond 4Cs : the color, clarity, carat and cut of a diamond. To make the best purchase possible online, you should familiariaze with grading charts and reports.

In addition to the diamond, there is the ring; the setting it has for the diamond, the precious metal from which it is crafted and the level of workmanship into making the ring. Buying diamond rings over the internet is easy, and painless. You can learn about the product, compare diamond ring prices, compare dealers, select the one you like most, purchase it and have it delivered to your home; just sitting in front of your computer.

diamond earring with blue topazDiamond earrings are also a perfect gift and purchasing them for a loved one for Christmas makes them an ideal presents. Earrings can also make a perfect gift for your children or grandchildren. They will always have something to remember you by when you purchase a set of diamond earrings. They can easily pass their set of diamond earrings onto their children and their children can pass them on to their children and so on. The thoughtful gift that you purchase them can easily turn into a family heirloom later in life. You can also take great confidence in knowing that you made a purchase that will not be used up or gone in a couple of weeks.

Giving these gift of a set of diamond earrings are forever. Start planning your Christmas gift now so you can have plenty of time to search for the perfect pair for your loved one.
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De Beers Company on Blood Diamond Trading

de beers logoDe Beers diamond management called all diamond traders throughout the world to back-up Africa's efforts to cut and polish its own gemstones. The South African miners controls 40% of the world's diamond trade, which is said needed to stabilize the diamond business by creating jobs to African people. New centers are emerging to take over from countries where ‘blood diamonds” have been outlawed.

Africa's natural resources enriched traders across the world and De Beers wants them to help train the infant industry, that are mostly based in South Africa and Botswana. Along with Sierra Leone and Liberia, the oil-rich Angola is recovering from years of conflict that saw diamond wealth fuel the fighting, which eventually leading to international efforts to legally ban the sale of gemstones from those countries.


About the De Beers Company

"De Beers Company, founded in South Africa in 1888 and as of today comprises the rough diamond exploration, mining and trading companies. The various companies within the De Beers “family of companies” are responsible for around 40% of world diamond production by value. De Beers is active in every category of diamond mining: open-pit, underground, large-scale alluvial, coastal and deep sea. De Beers is not involved in informal small-scale diamond mining, which is rarely economical for large mining companies."

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Lindsay Lohan's Golden Handcuffs with Diamonds


Lindsay Lohan gold handcuffs


Lindsay Lohan goes out and bought herself a pair of gold with diamond handcuffs. Lohan climbed the ranks of the kink scale when she bought this pair of diamond encrusted handcuffs at Fred Segal in Beverly Hills on Sunday ... for a blingin' $820! Reported by Life Style Extra.

Lindsay has put the key of the handcuffs on a gold chain around her neck. So, only a certain someone has to get the permission to wrap these babies on LiLo.


Giving her love life a little bit of spice! These exquisite diamond hand cuffs have been produced to give ultimate in fashionable restraints.

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The Rarest Gems in the World : Blue Diamonds

blue diamond the rarest gemBlue diamonds have captivated the rich and powerful shimmering brilliance with a certain mystique. The famous Hope Diamond, a 45.52 carat grey-blue in beauty, was passed down through the ages from King Louis XIV of France, Marie Antoinette and American heiress Evalyn Walsh McClean among others. It can be found today in the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC.

One of the rarest gems in the world, a flawless blue diamond, has sold for $US7.98 million ($A8.9 million) at a Sotheby's auction in Hong Kong, making it the most expensive gemstone per carat in the world sold at auction. The Sultan of Brunei reportedly bought another massive "blue" which surfaced briefly in the 1980s.

After intense bidding, the 6.04 carat, internally flawless blue diamond fetched $HK61.9 million, or $US1.32 million ($A1.47 million) per carat. The price smashed a 20-year-old record held by the Hancock Red - a red diamond, which fetched US$926,000 per carat at the time, auction house Sotheby's said. Sotheby's said the buyer was Moussaieff Jewellers in London, which has a reputation for acquiring extremely rare and costly gemstones. The seller was a private Asian collector.

While not a large stone, the Sotheby's diamond has an esteemed cut and "fancy vivid blue" hue - factors which contributed to its blockbuster price of roughly 10 times the per-carat price of regular white diamonds. The blue hue is a result of trace amounts of boron in the stone's crystal structure. Other coloured diamonds with pink and red hues can be mined in multiple locations across the globe including Brazil, India and Australia, but "blues" are mostly found at just one site on earth - the Premier mine in South Africa.
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Amazing developments ensue........


The most amazing developments starts here.........

We are pleased to announce that we can now offer custom made and absolutely unique urns by John Ditchfield.

John is very well known in glass blowing circles and his work is collected all over the world.

With John's permission, we intend to write a short introduction and show more of his unusual designs.
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Naomi Watts : mark motherhood with Diamond Locket

Naomi Watts motherhoodNaomi Ellen Watts (born September 28, 1968) , a British actress who is well-known for her many roles in films like Mulholland Drive, the film remakes of The Ring and King Kong, and as well as her Academy Award-nominated role in the film 21 Grams....


Naomi Watts, the new mom that has a special keepsake to mark her son's birth - a diamond and platinum locket holding his photo.

The heart pendant, a gift from Watts' long-term partner Liev Schreiber, was reportedly designed by the actor and jeweller Neil Lane.

A friend tells In Touch magazine, "It was a very special gift for her. Liev helped Neil with it after hours."

The Hollywood couple welcomed baby Alexander last month (25Jul07).



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Zeta-Jones afraid to wear expensive jewelry

Catherine Zeta-Jones wearing Jewelry"I'll never get divorced, never.", said the Multi-Talented Actress
Catherine Zeta-Jones



The Oscar-winning actress, who is married to Hollywood actor Michael Douglas, says her mother-in-law, Diana, has warned her she must only wear things she is prepared to lose.

Catherine Zeta-Jones is afraid to wear expensive jewelry in case she loses it.

Catherine, who is now the model of the Di Modolo jewellery - said, "I carry a lot of jewelry with me, but I often worried something is going to happen. My mother-in-law says that a woman should never put something on you can't afford to lose."

Catherine, who has two children with Michael Douglas recently vowed the she never have divorced, saying "That marriage is a life-long commitment."

She said, "I fell in love with my husband at first sight, and I do feel the same way. At other point, my little babies are going to run out of the nest and I don't want to look at Michael and say, 'Hey, remember us?'
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Gold Necklace Love Letter of Brad Pitt to Angelina Jolie

Love Letter Gold Necklace"I find you in the morning sky, in the sound of children's laughter,
in the motion of every stirring wind." "I love you, Brad."
from the Gold Necklace Love Letter from Brad Pitt to Angelina Jolie


Before they went to the Cannes Film Festival, Brad Pitt gave Angelina Jolie an 18k gold love letter charm made by the Paris engraver Cassegrain.

"I love you, Brad" ends a not-so-secret 18-carat golden love-letter from Pitt to Angelina Jolie, offered shortly before the A-list couple flew in for the Cannes film festival last month.

Master Paris engraver, the one who made the love-letter pendant, a miniature gold card slipped discreetly into a golden envelope, begins: "I find you in the morning sky, in the sound of children's laughter, in the motion of every stirring wind." "I love you, Brad," the message ends.

Worth 1,500-euro piece of jewelry from Pitt to Jolie also includes a portrait of tiny Pax Thien, the last of three children adopted by the couple who also have a birth daughter, Shiloh, said a spokesman for the French luxury engraver and printer Cassegrain.

Is is just us, or is this endless parade of romantic stories about Brangelina getting kind of ridiculous? Romantic jewelry, making out in front of the paparrazi in Cannes, Angie's rhapsodizing about the couple's bath time chats, Brad's brilliance at all things manly, reports of yet another adoption (this time in Czechoslovakia)...it's all getting a bit overwhelming, isn't it? Is it a love affair or a marketing campaign? Not that it can't all be true, but we're just asking...

Discounted Diamonds,Jewelries and watches at
Diamond Jewelry Collection | Elegant Watches
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The Black Orlov Diamond Myth

Black Orlov DiamondThe Black Orlov Diamond Pendant

In the early 1800s in India, the Black Orlov diamond was discovered . It originally weighed 195 carats. It was allegedly cursed - as were all its future owners - when a monk removed the gem from the eye of the idol of Brahma at a shrine near Pondicherry, India.

At least three former owners have apparently killed themselves. In 1932, J W Paris, the diamond dealer who imported the stone to the United States, jumped to his death from one of New York's tallest buildings shortly after concluding the sale of the jewel. And 15 years later, a pair of Russian princesses, Nadia Vyegin-Orlov and Leonila Galitsine-Bariatinsky, leapt to their deaths within a month of each other.

In an attempt to escape the curse, the diamond was re-cut into three separate stones, which have since been in the possession of a succession of private owners.

The 67.5 carat stone known today as the Black Orlov is set in a 108-diamond brooch suspended from a 124-diamond necklace. When the diamonds exhibition closes in February, the necklace will travel to California where a star, whom Petimezas refused to name, will wear it to the 2006 Oscars ceremony.

Black diamonds are very rare and get their colour from the presence of tiny mineral traces, mainly the iron-oxide minerals magnetite and haematite. Only one in 10,000 diamonds mined is coloured.

This diamond is currently owned by Dennis Petimezas, a diamond dealer from Pennsylvania, who bought it for an unspecified sum last year.

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Hardest Diamond Ever

hardest diamond

Dr Chih-shiue Yan of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution in Washington and colleagues published their findings on 20 February online in the journal Physica Status Solidi (a).






The resulting chemical reaction causes a "carbon rain" in which carbon atoms fall onto the seed and arrange themselves in the crystalline structure same as the original diamond. The diamonds produced by this process were already tough but the researchers toughened it up further by subjecting them to 2000°C and 5-7 gigapascals (up to 70,000 times atmospheric pressure). After this, the man-made diamonds were 50% harder than conventional diamonds. But making diamonds was not the researcher's main goal: "Our group is interested in the behaviour of materials at extreme pressures and temperatures," said co-researcher Dr Russell Hemley.
"We believe these results are major breakthroughs in our field," said Yan. "Not only were the diamonds so hard that they broke ourmeasuring equipment, we were able to grow gem-sized crystals in about a day." The researchers grew the crystals using a process known as chemical vapour deposition (CVD). This involves bombarding hydrogen gas and methane with plasma in a chamber containing a small "seed" of existing diamond.


Diamonds are used in a range of applications from heat dissipation in electronics, to cutting tools and super-transparent, super-strong windows for spacecraft landing on Venus.


diamond anvilOne of their less glamorous applications is to create what are known as diamond anvils. These are tiny individual crystals of diamond, polished to a point like the one pictured above. Anvils are used in pairs, tip-to-tip, to create enormous pressures between them and provide geologists and astrophysicists a tool for probing the high pressures in remote areas such as the centre of our planet. Materials researcher Professor Steven Prawer of the University of Melbourne said the CVD process had been around for 20 years but it had never been used to produce diamond tough enough for use as diamond anvils. Until now, only expensive natural diamonds had been used.

Many people think "unscrupulous operators" in the gem trade had used CVD to boost the weight of otherwise natural diamonds, Prawer said. But CVD had always been very slow, taking an hour to deposit one or two microns of diamond. The advantage in the new research was the relatively rapid production of ultra-tough diamonds using the CVD method, said Prawer. This was possible as the researchers worked out how to grow diamond crystals on a diamond seed. "It's pretty convincing data," he said. The research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Nuclear Security Agency.
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Diamonds 4Cs : Clarity, Cut, Carat and Color

Diamond 4CsHave you probably heard about the four Cs used to classify diamonds? These 4Cs are: clarity, cut, carat and color. These 4Cs where use to measure and to determine the value of individual diamonds, with diamonds exhibiting the most desirable combinations of clarity, cut, carat weight and color rising to the top as the most universally unique and highest valued gems. These where implemented throughout the world.

Clarity is about or refers to the extent of inclusions, or natural features such as fractures present in the diamond that originated from its formation deep within the earth. A diamond’s cut describes the design and proportions of the diamond after it is crafted by a diamond cutter, an art form that manifests itself in the diamond’s outward appearance and brilliance. Carat is about the description of a diamond’s weight, with one carat representing a weight of 200 milligrams. Color is a diamond quality that generally refers to the extent to which a diamond is colorless. The Gemological Institute of America (GIA) has established a widely accepted color scale to rate diamonds falling in the normal color spectrum, which ranges from colorless to yellow. Diamonds which fall closer to the colorless end of the color spectrum are generally considered more valuable than yellow or brown tinted diamonds of equivalent clarity, cut and carat weight.

Intensely colored diamonds are the exception, their rarity and beauty making them extremely valuable and exotic despite being far from colorless. Although many people perceive all diamonds to be colorless, true colorless diamonds are extremely rare, and thus the most valuable on the GIA color scale. A majority of diamonds commonly used in jewelry such as engagement rings and eternity rings have a tint of yellow or brown, placing them in the normal color range. Though slight variations in the color of diamonds are to be expected, the difference among various shades is usually indistinguishable to the untrained eye.

While diamonds in the normal color range are the most common, diamonds form within the earth in an array of colorful hues. Diamonds in vibrant colors such as pink, yellow, green and blue, called fancy colored diamonds, are highly sought after by diamond connoisseurs and jewelry consumers alike. The rarity and splendor of such exotic diamonds contributes to their high value, and is the reason that colored diamonds are often attractions at museums and exhibits. The famous and fabled 45.52 carat Hope Diamond on display at the Smithsonian Institution since 1958 is a prime example, requiring dedicated security measures and personnel of its own.

Like white diamonds, the value of a fancy colored diamond is determined in part by the collective value of its four Cs. However, the color attribute becomes a more significant dynamic in the valuation of a colored diamond. Rather than being evaluated on its lack of color, a colored diamond is valued based on the quality of its hue, intensity and consistency.



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Argyle: The Exceptional, Rare and Pink Diamond

argyle diamondA 2.02 ct octagon fancy deep pink / I2 diamond from the Argyle tender



At Rio Tinto’s Argyle Pink Tender during its three stops around the world – New York, Perth and Hong Kong, some 100 diamond firms are viewing 65 pink, red and violet diamonds.

In advance a catalogue is sent to the invitees, in order for them to be taken to retailers and to consumers who have assess and to have interest in the market for the goods. According to senior sales executive Gavin Pearce, 60 – 65 percent of all pink diamonds are sold mostly in Japan, which is why in addition to the GIA certification, they are also certified by AGT. A viewing of the diamonds, arranged for IDEX Online at a non-disclosed location, revealed an array of diamonds that is needed to be seen and to be truly appreciated.


In addition to this diamonds, a number of purplish reds and deep pinks, a rare grey-violet diamonds are also offered. Rio Tinto is in the process of expanding the Argyle mine, which supplies more than 90 percent of the world’s pink diamonds. Currently in an open mine, a deeper underground mine will extend the mine’s life up to 2018.

The global supply of these diamonds is now dwindling. At the end of the closed tender the submitted bids will be compared and bidder's winners are notified. Due to the increasing rarity of these precious gems, Argyle expects the results to be higher than usual. Naturally, they are not disclosing how high.

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