New
synthetic diamonds are so closely resemble mined diamonds that the
naked eye cannot tell the difference, often saving consumers enough
money to make a down-payment on a new home or buy a car. Unfounded
diamond jeweler arrogance, pretentiousness, and snootiness has gone too
far!
My girlfriend has been parading around town with a magnificent 4-carat
Round Brilliant cut synthetic diamond set in a stunning 14K solid gold
filigree solitaire ring setting for a year now. She has been to
restaurants, work, shopping, night clubs, museums, and parties. Family
and friends have scrutinized her ring. She has been stopped repeatedly
by others who were dumbfounded by her ring. Hundreds of people have
seen her ring, astonished by its majesty, gushing about it. And despite
its ostentatious size, no one has asked if it is a fake diamond!
How could this be? The latest breakthrough science in lab-created
diamonds has brought them in line with mined diamonds. Long gone is the
aurora borealis or "disco ball" effect that was seen in synthetic
diamonds of the past decades. New millennium synthetic diamonds--with
similar hardness, clarity, fire, and brilliance--are indistinguishable
with the naked eye and simply don't look fake. High quality synthetic
diamonds even have the coveted hearts-and-arrows effect.
This begs the question: If one were to saunter into a jewelry store
with a synthetic diamond, can a jeweler tell the difference? Since all
mined diamonds have color disparities (flaws), birthmarks (flaws), and
inclusions (flaws), and lab-created diamonds have none of the above, a
trained eye can tell the difference. A sneering glance under a loupe or
even under discriminating examination with a magnifying glass, a
jeweler will often proudly declare a synthetic diamond as a fake.
Modern synthetic diamonds are too perfect in the world of jeweler
snobbery when pushing over-priced high profit diamonds is the agenda at
hand.
With the use of scientific testing equipment, mined diamonds will
conduct electricity and synthetic diamonds will not. That is because
mined diamonds are a carbon gem material and synthetic diamonds are
polycrystalline. A thermal probe will produce different readings,
differentiating the two. But does this really matter to a jewelry lover
who is interested in aesthetic beauty and saving thousands of dollars?
In the year my girlfriend has been showcasing her synthetic diamond on
her finger; no one has walked up to her with scientific equipment
asking to test her gemstone.
Why do virtually all brick-and-mortar jewelers carry only mined
diamonds? Why do jewelers scoff at synthetic diamonds? You need to look
no further than your wallet. A 1-carat high quality mined diamond is
about $3000, a 2-carat about $18,000, a 3-carat about $40,000, and a
4-carat goes for about $90,000. Respectively, synthetic diamonds run
about $79, $158, $237, and $326. It's about the money. Don't kid
yourself.
It's also about indoctrination. For over a century, the diamond cartel
has spent billions of dollars convincing the public that jewel quality
mined diamonds have intrinsic value like gold. Not true. Why? During
this time DeBeers has limited production, bought up supplies from
others, stockpiled inventory, and imposed its monopoly position on
jewelry manufacturers in the successful effort to keep prices inflated.
And to make matters worse, the diamond industry as a whole has a
checkered past with conflict stones, debt-slave child labor in India
used in cutting operations, and shady techniques used to enhance
perceived quality to further squeeze out ridiculous prices from
beleaguered jewelry lovers.
Smart jewelry shoppers today are considering synthetic diamonds as an
alternative to mined diamonds for some very savvy reasons: (1) They can
acquire fine jewelry pieces set in solid 14K gold. (2) They will save
literally thousands of dollars. (3) There is no need to buy insurance.
(4) When wearing there synthetic diamond jewelry nobody will know that
they are not mined diamonds unless they tell them!