Diamonds are typically set in metal, so as to protect the stone from loss.
Some diamonds do get set in 925 silver, but they are usually just diamond chips. Diamonds are commonly set in platinum, white gold and gold.
With the soaring price of gold, a lot of genuine diamond jewelry is being produced in 925 (Sterling Silver) settings.
The 925 is a sterling silver mark. I would doubt if diamonds were set in this . They are most apt to be crystals or paste
925 Jewlery is silver and jewlers do not put diamonds on silver. Diamonds need to be set with gold or platinum. There are various karat classifications of gold (10k, 12k, etc) the different grades of gold determine the quality and "softness" of the gold.
Yes, we have had "designer" jewellery of diamond set silver and also diamond set stainless steel.
925 is typically the standing stamp on sterling silver jewelry so in this example this would mean the gold is plated on a sterling silver banding and set with diamonds.
Would a genuine diamond be set in a ring stamped 925 m
There is zero relationship between the stamp on jewelery metal and the stones set in the metal. A local jeweler using a probe can answer your question.
925 bezel or channel settings would be safer than 999 silver because sterling is harder than fine silver and therefore more secure. However, diamonds can eventually shear through sterling prongs because the stone is so hard. Silver prong settings should be avoided for this particular gemstone.
it just means the diamond is set in silver and not gold. Rarely can the metal setting for any jewelery authenticate the stones set therein. The numeric stamp 925 is an indicator of silver metal, and whether or not this is accurate may require testing.
6,000,000,000,000 years ago
score is a set of twenty so 4 x 20 + 10 = 90 years ago.