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hearts on fire certify diamond ring vvs2
Natural
$2,800.00
$3,500.00
from $233 /month
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Item Details
condition like new only wore 2 hours upon possession
very sparkling view by naked eyes
video : http://youtu.be/QBPwttdanN0
***Why aren’t Hearts and Arrows available in lower color & clarity?
The labor costs and weight loss incurred in manufacturing these goods can be quite substantial. In lower priced diamonds, these costs have a much higher impact on price (by percentage). Cutters would have to ask a very high price to be profitable, so they choose more expensive rough to cut into hearts and arrows and relegate the lower qualities to factories that produce average cuts.
2) Why don’t more jewelers carry Hearts and Arrows?
There are many reasons ... here are a few:
Some sell only lower priced diamonds, which are normally cut for weight retention and not for top beauty.
Some lack the expertise to sell high performance diamonds.
Hearts and Arrows are still so new that some jewelers don’t understand or embrace them. Though, this is changing.
Still others do not have reliable suppliers of these diamonds and therefore they choose to sell what’s readily available.
3) You don’t mention the other 3 C’s aren’t they important, too?
Yes, but unlike Cut they are quite easy to quantify. In fact, Color, Clarity and Carat weight are quite well known by the public. These three traits traditionally were the sole criteria for most people (except for price) when buying a diamond. There’s a lot of information on the Web about the other C's, but our focus here is cut.
4) When shopping for a Hearts and Arrows diamond, what type of diamond certificate is best?
This is an interesting question. It should be noted here that most of the biggest online sellers misuse the term Certificate. Neither the Gemological Institute of America nor the American Gem Society will “certify” any diamond. They simply issue grading reports. GIA calls theirs a Diamond Grading Report and AGS refers to their report as a Diamond Quality Document. The dictionary describes the word certify as: "to guarantee the quality or value of" or "to guarantee as certain”. GIA clearly states on the bottom of every document: "this report is not a guarantee." We use only GIA and AGS reports for our Hearts and Arrows diamonds.
******* When cutting these extraordinary diamonds, cutters must adhere to a specially prescribed formula of facet placement and limited proportion sets throughout the cutting process. Again, the faceting arrangement is paramount.
my stone lot met or passes all the adhere prescribed formula of facet palcement and limited proportion sets you may check the photos stone cutting angle degree clearly shown the pavilion depth, table, crown angle......
A diamond’s most critical parts: (H&A) 0.528 lot offer:
Table – 53% to 57.5% = 55.5%
Total depth – 58% to 63% = 61.1 %
Crown – 33 to 35 degrees. = 34.2 degrees
Pavilion depth – 42.5% to 43.5%. = 43.1 %
Pavilion angle - 40.5% to 41.0% = 40.9%
pavilion half length - 75% to 83% = 76%
crown angle - 33% to 37.5% = 34.2%
star length = 55 %
be vigilant that plenty diamonds
on sell resemble plastic stone
i asked diamond shop sales representative why when compare to hearts on fire totally different as HOF steadily shown
it is exactly looking as a diamond stone instead a plastic rubber loaf
of stone!?
sales representative answered was it's all about the cut !!
choice for quality not quantity stone thus is forever and good worth diamond.
selling it to support stray dogs
rearing 10+ dogs still wish increasing
number of dogs
sustaining daily food
neutering
nexgard medication
infection antibac bear heavy vet costs
very sparkling view by naked eyes
video : http://youtu.be/QBPwttdanN0
***Why aren’t Hearts and Arrows available in lower color & clarity?
The labor costs and weight loss incurred in manufacturing these goods can be quite substantial. In lower priced diamonds, these costs have a much higher impact on price (by percentage). Cutters would have to ask a very high price to be profitable, so they choose more expensive rough to cut into hearts and arrows and relegate the lower qualities to factories that produce average cuts.
2) Why don’t more jewelers carry Hearts and Arrows?
There are many reasons ... here are a few:
Some sell only lower priced diamonds, which are normally cut for weight retention and not for top beauty.
Some lack the expertise to sell high performance diamonds.
Hearts and Arrows are still so new that some jewelers don’t understand or embrace them. Though, this is changing.
Still others do not have reliable suppliers of these diamonds and therefore they choose to sell what’s readily available.
3) You don’t mention the other 3 C’s aren’t they important, too?
Yes, but unlike Cut they are quite easy to quantify. In fact, Color, Clarity and Carat weight are quite well known by the public. These three traits traditionally were the sole criteria for most people (except for price) when buying a diamond. There’s a lot of information on the Web about the other C's, but our focus here is cut.
4) When shopping for a Hearts and Arrows diamond, what type of diamond certificate is best?
This is an interesting question. It should be noted here that most of the biggest online sellers misuse the term Certificate. Neither the Gemological Institute of America nor the American Gem Society will “certify” any diamond. They simply issue grading reports. GIA calls theirs a Diamond Grading Report and AGS refers to their report as a Diamond Quality Document. The dictionary describes the word certify as: "to guarantee the quality or value of" or "to guarantee as certain”. GIA clearly states on the bottom of every document: "this report is not a guarantee." We use only GIA and AGS reports for our Hearts and Arrows diamonds.
******* When cutting these extraordinary diamonds, cutters must adhere to a specially prescribed formula of facet placement and limited proportion sets throughout the cutting process. Again, the faceting arrangement is paramount.
my stone lot met or passes all the adhere prescribed formula of facet palcement and limited proportion sets you may check the photos stone cutting angle degree clearly shown the pavilion depth, table, crown angle......
A diamond’s most critical parts: (H&A) 0.528 lot offer:
Table – 53% to 57.5% = 55.5%
Total depth – 58% to 63% = 61.1 %
Crown – 33 to 35 degrees. = 34.2 degrees
Pavilion depth – 42.5% to 43.5%. = 43.1 %
Pavilion angle - 40.5% to 41.0% = 40.9%
pavilion half length - 75% to 83% = 76%
crown angle - 33% to 37.5% = 34.2%
star length = 55 %
be vigilant that plenty diamonds
on sell resemble plastic stone
i asked diamond shop sales representative why when compare to hearts on fire totally different as HOF steadily shown
it is exactly looking as a diamond stone instead a plastic rubber loaf
of stone!?
sales representative answered was it's all about the cut !!
choice for quality not quantity stone thus is forever and good worth diamond.
selling it to support stray dogs
rearing 10+ dogs still wish increasing
number of dogs
sustaining daily food
neutering
nexgard medication
infection antibac bear heavy vet costs

Brand
Hearts on Fire

Setting Information
White Gold 18K

Diamond Information
0.5 CaratRound Solitaire VVS2 I Color

AGS
American Gem Society
Brand |
Hearts on Fire |
---|---|
Ring Style |
Solitaire |
Stone Color |
I |
Clarity |
VVS2 |
Certification |
AGS|American Gem Society |
Metal |
White Gold 18K |
Total Carat Weight |
0.50 - 1.00 |
Center Carat Weight |
0.53 |
Total Carat Weight |
0.528000 |
Shape |
Round |









