Tag Archives: carat

Diamond

For thousands of years diamonds have been a form of decoration, currency and investment medium. Diamonds have risen in price over the years fairly consistently with inflation. At some points investment in the right stone would have returned a much better percentage than similar amounts of stocks, bonds or gold. On the other hand, an investment in the wrong thing or an investment made blindly because of lack of knowledge, can and in many cases has caused the buyer to actually lose money.

Remember, diamonds are normally sold on a retail basis. This is where you, the consumer, buy most stones. As one purchases stones of a higher quality and larger weight, stones that are designed for investment purposes rather than ornamentation, it is possible to actually buy at or near wholesale prices. When one goes to sell the stone, if one simply walks into a jeweler or New York-type diamond seller, one expects to lose from the retail price the stone may have been purchased at.

A number of factors establish the value of a diamond, one of which is the size of the stone. There are certain levels where the value of a high grade stone jumps appreciably simply because the stone is over this weight. In general, a large high-rated stone is worth logarithmically more than a number of small stones equaling the larger stone’s weight. It is, as one would expect, considerably harder to find flawless or near flawless large stones.

When the jeweler or professional goes to buy a stone there are several things he will evaluate in order. Generally the stone is graded using the four C’s of diamond grading. These are:

1. Clarity

2. Color

3. Cut

4. Carat weight

There are established methods and models for grading stones and one could reasonably expect to take a stone of a certain grade from one professional to another and come out with a similar rating. One should also remember this grading is subjective and there will be times when two accredited gemologists will give a different rating, possibly affecting the stone’s value, by hundreds or thousands of dollars to the very same stone. It is wise to be able to at least make a good amateur estimate of the various rating points on your own instead of having to blindly depend on someone you may not know.

Particular diamonds

The largest of all the undoubted Diamonds is that mentioned by Tavernier as in the possession of the Grand Mogul. In form and size it resembles half a hen’s egg: its weight, according to the testimony of the same traveller, (a jeweller by profession and who himself weighed it,) is 297 carats, or, 156 carats being equal to a troy ounce, 860 grains. It was found about the year 1550 in the mine of Colore, not far to the east of Golconda.

An oriental Diamond formerly belonging to Nadir Shah, Sultan of Persia, deserves the next place: it is without flaws or faults of any kind, and weighs 193 carats. Its form is that of a flattened ovoid, and it is about the size of a pigeon’s egg.

The next in size is a rough Brasilian Diamond, found in the river Abatio in, possession of the Prince Regent of Portugal weighing near an ounce troy.

The Pitt or Regent Diamond, is said to, have been found in Malacca, It was purchased by Mr. Pitt, an English gentleman, then Governor of Bencoolen in Sumatra, and was sold by him to the Regent Duke of Orleans by whom it was placed among the crown jewels of France, and of which it still forms the great glory. It is cut in the form of a brilliant, and is absolutely faultless. It weighs 136 carats, and its value as estimated by a commission of jewellers in the year 1791, is twelve millions of livres.

Perhaps one of the largest and most beautiful coloured Diamonds is a rich sky-blue brilliant, belonging to the crown jewels of France: it weighs 67 carats, and is estimated at three millions of livres.

In this list I have not enumerated the supposed great Diamond of Portugal, because it is now the general opinion, both of mineralogists and jewellers, that this stone is a white topaz. It was found in Brazil, in the Diamond mines, is as yet in its rough state, and weighs 1680 carats, above eleven ounces.