You can find the names for many famous diamonds below.
Sparlking Ice, Shimmering Rock, Brilliant Gem, Glittering Stone.
Diamonds do not have an odor.
No, chocolate diamonds are a marketing term used by Le Vian to describe brown diamonds. They are still real diamonds but have a distinct brown color due to the presence of nitrogen impurities. Regular diamonds can come in a variety of colors but are most commonly white or colorless.
Brown diamonds are the most common of coloured diamonds found. Chocolate is simply the name of one of the shades of natural brown diamonds. Lab-created diamonds are generally 'white' diamonds.
Diamonds are a solid.
Yes.
Some diamonds that are also used as given names include Tiffany, Marquise, and Emerald.
diamonds
The ladies and gentlemen who cut diamonds are called diamond cutters. Very few publish their names.
Humans interested in power and money are responsible for conflict diamonds. Other names for these humans are war lords and terrorists.
There are at least four names for square-cut or squar-ish-cut diamonds. Other diamonds may be cut in a square shape, but because the cut was planned to preserve a high carat weight, the name is a custom name.Common square-cut names for diamonds include:PrincessAsscherRadiantCushion
Fake diamonds are known by many names, including but not limited to...Cubic ZirconiumPasteGlassCrystalMoissaniteDiamanteWhite sapphireQuartzand so forth. None are diamond.
Large diamonds, typically more weighty than 14-20 carats, and many larger, earn their names based on who owns them, or who has owned them. Buying a 'large' diamond also buys diamond naming rights.
Not all diamonds have names: usually, large diamonds are named. There are two diamonds in the list, below, described with the word purple. This doesn't mean that there are not more; it simply means that not all purple diamonds are named, and that finding lesser-known purple diamonds requires more than a cursory Internet search.
A quick search reveals the names of two companies, LifeGems and Memorial Diamonds, that can both create diamonds from human ashes. Both companies appear to be operating in USA.
Sparlking Ice, Shimmering Rock, Brilliant Gem, Glittering Stone.
Since diamonds were first picked up and admired more than 6,000 years ago, their names have been lost to history. Generally, however, documentation reveals that diamonds were first worn and collected by royalty.