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Flawless Natural Diamond - or HPHT Enhanced

Date: 19 November, 2008

With your loupe in hand, you arrive at the largest gemologists convention., which will allow you ample opportunity to meet and discuss with a wide range of professional gemologists all in one setting. There is a discourse about to start on the wisdom of purchasing more expensive Grade D, E, or F when the lesser stones, some down to J or even M are being cleaned and polished to much higher status, yet dragging down the price overall. Whether there is any issue about this remains a minor issue.

So consider the risk of knowingly investing in a diamond that has been altered from it's yellowish tinge to pure white by a chemical change. Developed only in the 1990's, this high pressure, high temperature annealing, or the HPHT process, to transform very tinted,off white diamonnds into colorless and near colorless diamonds. These stones were at first spoken of as GE - POL diamonds but are now referred to as Bellataire diamonds. Results are permanent.

Unlike earlier treatments, the level of this present HPHT now creates nearly flawless white diamonds from lessers. And this becomes vital for you an investor if you happen to find your bargain F grade diamond is in fact merely a J gussied up with a chemical treatment. You may want to consul further when you are are this point, and perhaps a letter of cetification would be advised. It would appear that there are many new companies on the market, and man are employing an means possible it seems to attract loyalty and attention.

HPHT is now more and more one of many new tricks to make a medeocre diamond appear brilliantly beyond itself. There is still much beauty in any diamond whether it has been chemically treated or is raw as God created. We know that some HPHT diamonds are coming onto the market without being certified as such, there are many companies apparetly skirt the rules. Finally there are tests on many HPHT diamonds. If you are in the market you can check and see if your diamond is on that list, although it is faulty and incomplete.

There are labs that can check your diamond , such as the GIA, the Swiss Foundation for the Research of Gemstones, or SSEF, and the European Gemological Laboratory will all grade diamonds treated in the HPHT method. All have information and brochures on how to watch for buying a lower grade diamond than you were promised and paid for. It is estimated that of alll diamonds minds, less than two percent come to market. So whether you take to striking your small new light hammer in rocky outcroppings along public walks.

You want to be out where your diamond maps show you where in your area show you where diamonds likely are. We are that clustered around such abundance and often only stumble upon some fun for te gang and perhaps more than as money. Have fun.

Tags: flawness, diamond, hpht, beauty, fashion, jewelry

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About the author

Derek Dashwood enjoys noticing positive ways we progress, the combining of science into the humanities to measure life atLoose Diamonds -- AM

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