How to ensure you don’t get ripped off when buying her diamonds

Posted by Hayden Allen-Vercoe on Thu 11th January 2007 at 04:42 AM, Filed in Romantic Gifts

Diamonds are a girls best friend as the saying goes. At some stage in a relationship she’s gonna want some and to someone who is no expert at picking a good diamond over a crap or fake one you can easily get it wrong.

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Can you tell the fakes?!

Read this article and take note of the hints and tips before you go spending all that £££££.

Instructions

STEP 1: Ask if the stone is a genuine diamond or if it is a cubic zirconia, moissanite or other synthetic substance. A reputable jeweler will give you an honest answer.
STEP 2: Look at the setting and mount. Since stones such as cubic zirconia are so much cheaper than diamonds, they are sometimes set in inferior metals.
STEP 3: Check the wear and tear on the stone. A cubic zirconia is not as durable as a diamond and may show signs of scratches or nicks.
STEP 4: Take the stone to a trusted jeweler. Looking through a jeweler’s loupe, he or she should be able to spot a fake stone right away. If the jeweler cannot tell by examining the stone, he or she will have instruments that can verify its authenticity.
STEP 5: It is highly recommended that you obtain a certificate from the Gemological Institute of America (GIA). The GIA, the largest impartial diamond grading authority in the world, issues a grading report after it examines the diamond and details it specifications.
STEP 6: Have the stone appraised by an independent appraiser who is affiliated with a professional organization such as the American Society of Appraisers (ASA). Ask for a certificate indicating the value and characteristics of the stone.

Tips & Warnings

• If a cubic zirconia is mounted in a high-quality diamond mount made of 18-karat gold or platinum, you are not likely to be able to spot the fake diamond unless you’re an expert.
• These days, some of the best imitation diamonds are made of moissanite. This substance, which didn’t come on the market until 1998, so closely resembles a diamond that even experts have a hard time telling the two stones apart without a special instrument. Moissanite sells for about one-tenth the price of diamonds.
• When purchasing “diamonds” online or buying stones you have not seen or had independently appraised, make sure the sale is accompanied by a grading report provided by an independent lab like the GIA. When you do make a purchase, get everything in writing.

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