It is true that fine colorless diamonds are generally more valuable than colored diamonds. However there are exceptions. The pink, blue and canary yellow diamonds, they can be more valuable when they occur naturally in nature and are not artificially colored. As for determining the authenticity of your stone I would suggest that you take it to your nearest trusted jeweler for indentification.
There are some people out there that have a hard time to understand What a Window in a Gemstone looks like. Many of the photos I’ve seen of sapphires, tourmaline, amethethyst cut in a round shape appear to have deep color on the outside rim of the Crown but much paler color looking into the top center of the crown. The term window used in the context of colored stones and even diamonds refers to a flaw in the cut of the stone. All crystals of gem materials have a refractive index which is how the stone bends light for reflection and refraction.
If the stone is cut properly the light should be reflected back out of the top of the stone so all you see is sparkle and light reflected. If you look down the center of the stone and you can see right through it, read through, you can read a paper without distortion then you have a ‘window’ you can see through. Properly cut gems should not have a ‘window’ in the middle.
Diamonds are usually the best cut and most of the time you cannot see through a diamond from the back since all the light is reflected back out through the table. Colored stones rarely are cut as well diamonds and they have much lower refractives indices so have to be cut much differently. Most cutters of colored stones try to get the color in the bottom of the pavilion so it will reflect evenly throughout the stone.
The concntration of color on the girdle is because it is the thickest part of the stone usually. Paler color is usualy due to the color zoning in the crystal and sometimes the cut can help but not always. Anyways the window in colored stones has nothing to do with color but mainly with the cut.
Black diamonds are one of the few stones that alot of people would like to have. But i have heard that black diamonds are going to diminish, I am not really sure about the market for black diamonds. I rarely see any one use them. I have had this question asked many times when it comes to colored stones,” Do the colored stones come out of the ground already colored?”
The answer is yes, they are that color out of the ground. Mostly the white stones are more valuable. However some of the large rare colors if they are very clean can demand high prices. It depends on the size and clarity and how pretty the color is and how rare it is. Usually diamond producing areas are quite vast and a number of different variations of colorless to pale yellow and brown or gray colors of diamonds can be found in a certain mine.
There are exceptions. The diamond mineds in Australia have high concentrations of unusually fancy colored diamonds. You can always go on the internet and see what you can find out some mineds that produc only some kinds of colored stones that you are looking for or you can ask your local jeweler about were he gets his and see what he has to say.
I prefer colored gems because there is an infinite variety, and it really uses my skills as a gemologist/mineralogist to identify the stones. Some of the most fortunate people are the ones from Rio de Janeiro, because they live in one of the richest gem producing areas of the world! Brazil is not only on the forefront of mining and fashioning gems but also the sophisticated ways in which colored stones are treated to improve their color and transparency.
Gems can be treated with heat, radiation, oils and polymers to improve their appearance. It is necessary for a gemologist to be able to identify these treatments and pass that information along to the owners or future buyers of these stones.
Diamonds, on the other hand, are a very controlled market. For the most part, their pricing, production and distribution are controlled by one of the biggest monopolies in the world: DeBeer’s Consolidated Mines. Internet sources like Blue Nile have really changed the market in favor of the consumer. Internet diamond dealers have taken much of the mystery out of diamond pricing and grading, and they have forced many retailers to be more honest and transparent with their diamond transactions. This is excellent and good for the buying public.
About the Author
Victor Epand is an expert consultant for http://www.4EngagementRing.info/. 4EngagementRing.info is the best place to buy engagement rings, wedding rings, and diamond rings. Browse through our selection of wedding jewelry and engagement rings here.
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Thanks for dropping by!
Oooooooooooooh, I just love yellow diamonds!
And I am LOVING YOUR PAGE!
Found you through Diamond over at A Day In The Zone.
Awsome!
I would have to choose a colorless diamond so it didn’t clash with my other jewelry. I actually semi-precious stones, like hematite and malachite.
I would love to have a pink diamond! Although the colorless ones are more versatile.
Good info in the article.
I still like the traditional colorless diamonds for my jewelry. I *would* like to own a rare black diamond, though, just to be able to say that I own one.
SageMother, I actually not a big fan of diamonds and my husband knows more about selection that I do.
I prefer the gemstones myself too!
Liquid, thanks for dropping by!
I just visited your website and you have the most wonderful photos I have ever seen. It would be so hard to pick the best three out of them!
EviesEarth, pink diamonds are also so nice, and so expensive!
I think it’s almost as rare as finding someone who can afford it to give it to you
Katharina, wow, I didn’t know there were black diamonds out there!
I’m not really sure I’d like to be given one though. It seems so gothic to me.
I prefer the clear ones most of the time. I would love to say I owned a pink diamond but they are just way to rare and expensive for me to own one.
I have to agree with tater on this one and say that I prefer a colorless diamond. I love diamonds by the way, and would be happy with anything though.
Tater03, diamonds are diamonds and I’d feel pretty special even if I get the *bottom of the barrel* kind.
I think for me, it’s more of the sentiment that goes with the diamond.
Well, if a guy is thinking about getting me a really expensive diamond, I am going to tell him to just give me the cash so I can either buy stock, or a new home.
Give me power! lol
That’s another way of looking at it SageMother.
I think that the sentiment really is important, but at the same time, it’s alright to have a preference for the more expensive diamonds. You can have a preference while still appreciating “cheaper” diamonds.
Jewel, aren’t diamonds a girl’s best friend?
SageMother, LOL! I’d still want my bling AND the new home.
Not necessarily! The only diamonds I particularly like are on rings, and even then, I am fine with other stones too. I guess it’s possible that I’m just part of the minority though.
Dogs are supposed to be man’s best friend, but that doesn’t mean they want every single dog they come across.
Jewel, I think sometimes we appreciate the bling too much that the sentiment just ends up blending into the background.
I have girlfriends who compare engagement rings all the time and that shouldn’t really be the case because love should be the meter, not the diamond.
Sure, we should appreciate the sentiment. That doesn’t mean that our preferences mean nothing.
Jewel, LOL!
I love diamonds, but I don’t think I’ve ever had real ones on earrings or necklaces. It’s always been on rings…. maybe because you can get bigger ones
Jewel, I guess we all can have our preferences when it comes to the bling that we get..
I’ve just been lucky that my husband knew how to pick his diamonds that I guess I’ve just been spoiled rotten.
this is such an informative article…like many others I also thought that colors were not really as precious as colorless diamonds..and I really had no idea about windows…thanks so much for the info.
Basically, if someone wants to buy me a large diamond, I won’t quibble over the colour of it, but accept gracefully. If I don’t like it, I can always sell it later
Hehe Good point, stav… I can’t see myself saying something like “oh thanks, but I’d really prefer a colorless.”
I’d prefer small, though, over very large when it comes to a diamond.