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To find it,
hold the diamond with a pair of tweezers by its girdle, under a 10x loupe
with dark field or direct lighting, or under a high-power gem microscope.
Tilt the diamond carefully back and forth and look perpendicular to the
surface. Certain distinct subtle colors are seen. One should look for
a flash with a purple, blue, violet-pink or yellow-orange colors. Lasered
Diamond Irradiated Diamond Irradiation is a process in which a diamond is exposed to high amounts of radiation, which artificially alters or improves the color of the diamond. Once color treated with radiation the diamond alters its color and can appear blue or green. This is much less expensive then a natural dark colored diamond. There are many stones that are cut to look like diamonds. The big scare back in the 1960's was fabulite, in the 70's it was cubic zirconia, but today we can all pick out these materials as non-diamonds with relative ease. Today there is a new material coming out on the market it is called synthetic moissanite. It is the hardest gem next to diamond. On the Mohs scale synthetic moissanite is rated 9.25 and a diamond is a 10. This is actually a big difference. Synthetic moissanite is not hard enough to polish sharp facet junctions as on a diamond. Moissanite, in its natural form, is usually too small to be cut into gemstones and is very dark in color usually dark green. The labs that grow synthetic moissanite have been able to lighten the color to be closer to the near colorless range and faceted to look much like a shallow cut diamond. Some other diamond simulants are White Sapphire, GGG, White Zircon, and Glass. Some signs and tales that indicate a non-diamond stone. Leshem Diamond Services provides lifetime guarantee
for the treatment of our clarity enhanced diamonds bought from us. In
case of a damaged treatment, we will retreat the diamond for free |
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