Anything is worth whatever someone will pay you for it: that is it's worth.
When you want to establish a fair market value for a diamond, best practices dictate that you pay for a certificate from a certified gemologist, who will inspect the diamond and document its carat weight, its colour, clarity and the excellence of its cut. Then you can compare your diamond to others in the market that are comparable.
Any diamond is worth whatever someone will pay you for it.
The tool is named diamond probe.
0.25 means its the carat of diamond,meaning you have quarter of carat real diamond
Any diamond is worth whatever someone will pay you for it. Today, on Blue Nile, you can purchase a diamond of this carat weight and pay between US$13,815 and US$68,676, depending on the cut, colour, clarity and exact carat weight that you want. Best practices dictate that if you own a diamond of this carat weight, that you pay a certified gemologist to document the characteristics of the diamond, in order to guide you in establishing a fair price for it.
It simply depends of the length and proportions of the diamond. You have to know the sides of it to determine the angles. ;)
No
Take your chocolate diamond to a jeweler, who can use a probe to confirm, or not, that the diamond is real, or not.
Take your black diamond to a jeweler and ask the jeweler to use the probe to verify that the diamond is a real diamond.
The value of a synthetic diamond is not as easy to determine as that of a real diamond. It's value may be exactly what a buyer will pay you for the stone.
take it to a jeweler
it is pretty simple really. the day on diamond or pearl is the same day as it is in real life.
By using a Diamond tester on the Diamonds and checking the hallmarks, if in doubt, check it out and take to a jewellers
The term 'genuine, clean diamond' implies a generalist's description of what a gemologist would term 'natural, acceptably flawed diamond'. The term 'regular diamond' is as descriptive as 'regular human'. Any diamond is worth what someone will pay you for it.
Half carat is the term used to measure the weight of the real diamond. A diamond's weight does not define or detract from the fact that the diamond is or is not a real diamond.
Take your gem to a local jeweler who can look at it and help you understand what it is.
In the old days, just scratch a piece of glass. If the glass scratches and the diamond is fine, then you have a real diamond.However, today, with manufactured diamonds, it's not so easy.For clarity, the best solution is to take it to a jeweler and get it tested, and valued at the same time, as you will need this to insure it - as it will be a real diamond, you will want to insure it.Another AnswerAny diamond is a real diamond, regardless of whether Mother Nature 'manufactured' it, or it is the product of a human manufacturing process.A human-process diamond is worth less than a natural diamond, but a diamond, nonetheless.A certified gemologist can verify the origin of your diamond -- a jeweler may not have the skills or experience to identify a stone's source. You pay for a gemologist's report, which you'll also need, should you require claim reimbursement under your insurance policy.
You can take your diamond to a local jeweler who can use a probe to help you figure out if the diamond is a real diamond.