Here are a few places you can try selling your diamond ring in Columbus: Mrs. Bills Collectibles (614)370-4653; EZ Cash Pawn Shop (614)224-0638; Gold Rush Jewelers (614)267-9200; and LJS Trading Post (740)453-3387.
At a jewler.
Ebay.com is an excellent place to sell jewelry.
some places locally that you can sell a diamond ring are pawn shops or certain jewelery stores. These stores will buy the diamond ring for cheap, but you may want to try various stores for appraisals before deciding on one.
One can sell a diamond ring on eBay, Craigslist or even on Amazon in their marketplace area. However, an alternative site would be I Do And I Don't which specialises in the sale of second hand diamond rings.
Yes they do, well the ones on Bethel Rd. in Columbus, Ohio.
Take the diamond to a certified gemologist, who can help you determine the ring's value, then you can sell it to whomever will come closest to your price.
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You should shop your ring around to a vareity of jewlery buyers. You may also get favorable prices from trying to sell your ring to a private party.
You are best advised to pay a certified gemologist to value the ring for you, before you attempt to sell it. You can sell it to a jeweler or a private party, or broker it to an online shopping option.
It is safe if you are selling it to a jeweler of repute.
Based on the eight questions you asked -- all alternates -- you have a diamond ring that you want to sell. Your first job is to pay for a certification of the diamond and the setting. You can take it to a certified gemologist -- not a local jeweler for an appraisal -- who will document the quality of the stone according to its cut, clarity, carat weight and colour. With this information, you'll have a better idea of the value of the ring. Then, you can sell it privately, consign it, pawn it or sell it outright. (You can buy a 3-carat diamond today from Blue Nile and spend from US$22,000 to US$28,000.)
* You can sell the ring privately by putting it on the Internet or in a newspaper ad, but don't sell it to a pawn broker as you won't get near what it's worth. Update: If you don't already have one, get a GIA grading report on the diamond. That way the quality of the ring will speak for itself. Otherwise you are relying on jewelers' opinions.