Any setting is appropriate for a diamond, depending on what the jewelry designer includes in the design. Uniformly, however, the setting must be secure for the stone, because of its value.
Solitaire is a style of setting for a ring: it provides one setting for a single gemstone. A 'normal diamond ring' can be any kind of diamond ring setting. A diamond is a diamond, regardless of its ring setting.
A solo diamond setting is called a solitaire.
How you set a diamond depends on the type of setting. The most common type of setting is a prong setting which is set by cutting tiny grooves on the inside of the prong. The edge of the diamond will sit in these grooves. The prongs are then squeezed against the diamond to hold it in place.
There must be a ways to place a Smaller diamond under the larger diamond, may be they must be using same setting or 2 different settings, but there is no specific setting for placing smaller under larger diamond. If any one come across the name of such setting please let me know.
'Best' is a judgement, and you are the judge. Setting a diamond is motivated by the quality of the diamond. Your jeweler can best answer this question once you've chosen the diamond and decided how it will be worn.
The possessive form of the singular noun diamond is diamond's.Example: The diamond's setting is new.
I'm setting the table, right now. That diamond has a nice setting.
No it is not a diamond but it is a type of setting where accent diamonds are set closely together for a diamond-encrusted look. The setting can simply be a band with a pave setting or a single stone with a pave setting on the sides.
Well no not really. The cost of a diamond is usually independent of the cost of a diamond ring setting. The only relationship I can think of between these two values is when a diamond is fancy cut, has an unusual shape or is very large in size. In that case, a run of the mill ring setting may not do, and you may need to have your ring setting custom made in order to accommodate an unusual diamond.
There are many ways to set a diamond or any other precious stone, depending on the cut, size and purpose of the setting. Any type of setting is designed to protect the stone and to keep the stone in the setting.
Yes. You can re-set a diamond into another setting, and in this sense it is recyclable.
An invisible setting will make the diamond look larger in the ring than it really is. The invisible setting technique was developed in France more than two centuries ago.