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Other
Colours 
Blue
Diamonds
Natural
blue diamonds are a light greyish blue shade, a more "steely" colour than
sapphire. The most famous blue diamond is the "Hope" diamond in Washington's
Smithsonian Institute. This stone is steeped in legends. Its last owner
was New York jeweller Harry Winston. He purchased it to donate to the
Smithsonian and only owned it for one day. While his insurance company
and armed couriers were discussing the cost and method of delivering the
priceless gem to Washington, Harry strolled down to the post office and
posted the diamond in a cigarette packet as ordinary mail!
Precious
Metals have access to the dozen or so violet-grey blue diamonds found
each year at Argyle.
Green
Diamonds
Green diamonds have comes in contact with radioactive minerals such as
uranium. Radiation stains the outside of the diamond, so the cutter must
be careful not to cut away too much of the green "skin". Authenticating
that the radiation occurred naturally requires laboratory analysis at
a leading gemmological institute. Buyer beware!
Yellow
and Orange Diamonds
To be called a Fancy colour means the diamond has more colour than Z on
the GIA D-Z white diamond grading scale. Fancy yellow diamonds come in
a range of hues from greenish yellow to amber. They start at similar prices
to white diamonds and prices raise with increasing intensity. Connoisseurs
in the trade use the term "canary" to describe intense yellow. Burnt orange
Argyle champagne's are a less expensive alternative to very expensive
pure gold or orange colours.
We
have a nice collection of moderate to intense yellow, greenish yellow
and gold coloured diamonds.
White-milky
Diamonds
A little known and quite rare diamond is a white opalescent diamond. These
are collector's oddities and we have a small selection at Precious Metals.
They are a lot less expensive than colourless diamonds, and we think they
were a real bargain. There have been articles written about them recently
in Gems and Gemology, the GIA in America's prestigious journal. Who knows
they may become the next fashion thing like black diamonds.
Black
Diamonds
Pave' set* Black diamonds are the in thing in Europe at present. We think
they make great men's jewellery for Aussie blokes, and we have understated
rings and cuff links for the rough diamond in a woman's life. Most of
the black diamond fashion jewellery is made with treated coloured diamonds.
Blacks with a good surface luster are rare, but naturally we specialize
in untreated blacks at Precious Metals.
*
Pave' is translated from French - pavement set as in cobblestones.
"Genetically
Modified" Colours
Demand
for coloured diamonds in Europe and America is outstripping supply, so
prices are going through the roof. It is no surprise then that technology
is being used to artificially create colours.
At
the Las Vegas trade fair one trader had 30 beautiful colours, each available
in any size, shape or consistently matched quantity. The colours were
created with sophisticated high temperature, high pressure and irradiation
processes.
Coincidently,
at my Argyle cutter's office a few weeks later I met the founder of that
company who joined us for lunch. He told me that he and a university professor
experimented for years and perfected the colouring processes.
They
can predict the colour change from low-quality less expensive diamonds.
He uses this specialised knowledge to buy diamonds at cutting centres,
and ships them to New York where the now wealthy professor treats them.
This is "clean" business with no dangerous residual radiation and the
stones are sold with the treatment declared. They supply large jewellery
manufacturers with sets of diamonds that are sold with full disclosure.
Imagine this technology in the hands of less scrupulous people? Many Eastern
European countries have turned their research facilities into diamond
treatment businesses.
GE
Bleached Pegasus Diamonds
Disclosure is an issue of great concern. General Electric Company has
produced synthetic diamonds for industrial abrasives since 1955. In 1999
GE's research and development people discovered a way to improve the colour
of some rare large diamonds (type II) using an advanced high pressure
/ high temperature treatment. The whitened gems more than doubled in value
and are marketed as Pegasus diamonds.
The
gem industry was confronted with an ethical dilemma. Legitimate gem dealers
are required to disclose any treatments on invoices, but GE maintained
the process duplicated nature and could never be detected thus disclosure
was unnecessary. The issue would have remained un-resolved but for gemmologists
discovering a number of tests to identify Pegasus diamonds.
Branding
Gems
Access
to technology in third world countries has led to an inevitable rise in
the number of undisclosed treated gems.
Passing
treated fancy coloured diamonds of as natural is a great way to turn a
quick buck. Branding and independent certification of gemstones will become
more common as a way of guaranteeing authenticity of untreated gems. Australia's
Argyle Diamond Company was first to brand its diamonds by source. BHP
are branding Yakuta diamonds from its new mine in Canada. They are inscribing
a polar bear on the girdle or edge of diamonds that are cut and polished
by locally trained Inuit workers.
De
Beers too is re-inventing itself. It aims to establish a leak proof supplier
of choice chain, eliminating "conflict diamonds" that have fuelled wars
in Africa. The cutters De Beers supply will be encouraged to market and
brand with the famous slogan "a diamond is forever". And for the first
time ever De Beers itself will retail diamonds under its own name. They
will be selling to their customer's customer's customers.
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