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Showing posts with label Diamond Colors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diamond Colors. Show all posts
Strong Color in Diamonds, Is it Bad or Good?

Strong Color in Diamonds, Is it Bad or Good?


The diamond industry consists of two market sectors when it comes to the presence or absence of color. A majority of the trade is focused on the buying and selling of colorless or near-colorless stones. This portion of the industry puts more value on the absence of color, rating diamonds using many proprietary systems- the most famous system being the one pioneered by the GIA, called the D-Z color scale, where D represents a diamond with no color at all, and Z represents the lowest tier (most presence of color admissible by the scale.) You may have heard jewelers advertising their best stones as D-Flawless, with D referring to the color quality and flawless referring to the top grade for clarity.



The minority focuses on the saturation or intensity of colors present. They favor diamonds that have color beyond the “z” graded stones of the previously discussed scale. Colored diamonds with enough color are called as fancy-colored diamonds, and a phrase-based grading system also governs the value hierarchy of these stones. The very best make their way to the halls of international auction events, representing the very top brackets of diamond value.

Intensely saturated yellow diamonds can compete with colorless diamonds, but highly vivid pinks, blues, reds and greens almost always command much higher prices than their colorless counterparts. This observance is due to a great disparity in rarity. Fancy deep and fancy vivid grades of colored diamonds are a tiny fraction of 1% of the diamond trade today. Be careful though to make sure that the diamond’s color is natural. Many highly included diamonds are often artificially irradiated and annealed to produce fancy colors for the trade.



The Argyle mine in Australia is famous for producing fancy-colored diamonds. Most of these are brown in color, earning the term 'chocolate diamonds', however a small percentage of their yield consists of pink colors- the finest of which go into their highly anticipated auction event; the Argyle Tender, which is usually held in Geneva. The world's most expensive diamonds sold at auction houses are typically fancy vivid grades rather than colorless grades.
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Only 1 in every 200,000 Natural Diamonds are Blue.

Only 1 in every 200,000 Natural Diamonds are Blue.


Have you ever wondered why some of the most illustrious diamonds in the world are blue? Gleaming, pristine colors as deep as the oceanic depths, give such an astounding ambience to many of these incredibly rare treasures of the earth.


It's estimated that just 1 in every 200,000 diamonds are blue. The 45 carat Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian, is probably the greatest example we have today of this incredibly scarce variety of diamond.

A scientist at the University of Hawaii, Dongzhou Zhang has studied the formation of natural blue diamond. Alongside his team of researchers, Zhang published an article in the journal 'Nature', that showed the world a little more about how blue diamonds form.


We already know that their vivid colors arise from trace percentages of boron. This element, aside from sharing some electro-conductive properties with the stone, also allows it to selectively absorb light differently from other diamonds. Portions of visible light enter the stone, but only some wavelengths are able to leave and return to our eyes, causing the blue color we see so clearly.

The article published newer information, that the impurities contained in most blue diamonds are actually found at a very deep level of the earth. It became clear that based on their findings, blue diamonds form at far greater depths than typical colorless diamonds- many at levels below 410 miles down into the earth.


Some of the researchers have suggested that boron, which absorbs red light (and makes diamonds show up blue) could have been originally present on areas of the ocean floor. When continental plates collided, there were forces that pushed these elements even further down, to levels where heat and pressure allowed for diamond formation occur.

Note that many blue diamonds sold today in jewelry, are a product of artificial enhancement. Color dyes, irradiation and many other modern-day processes create colors in otherwise near-colorless stones. The prices of treated diamonds are much lower than their natural-colored counterparts.
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