Assuming that your carats refer to diamonds, a diamond is valued by its cut, clarity, carat weight and colour. A local jeweler can look at your diamonds and give you a precise answer.
no
Diamonds are measured in CARATS. Purity of gold is in KARATS. A 14 carat diamond would be an extremely large diamond- about the size of a marble. Value is based on carat weight, cut, color, and clarity- but that would be a multi-million dollar stone in all likelihood. But I think you are looking at marking of the metal.
916kdm gold is 24 carat gold
The carat (abbreviation ct or Kt) is a measure of the purity of gold Therefore 24-carat gold is fine (99.9% Au w/w), 18-carat gold is 75% gold, 12-carat gold is 50% gold, etc.
The price for a one carat diamond cluster will vary greatly depending on things such as the quality and size of the diamonds in the cluster. The type of ring setting is also a factor in price such as 10, 14, 18 or 24 carat gold. An example is a 10k white gold diamond cluster is $600 at Zales but a 14 carat diamond cluster on the Ross Simons site sells for $2,471.
Assuming that your carats refer to diamonds, a diamond is valued by its cut, clarity, carat weight and colour. A local jeweler can look at your diamonds and give you a precise answer.
The value of a diamond depends on its cut, its clarity, its colour and its carat weight. A local jeweler can give you the answer you want.
It all depends on: how many diamonds make up the 1ct cluster, what is the quality/grade of the diamonds, is the ring in gold, platinum? The ring is 14k white gold with 7 .2 carat stones the diamonds are okay I don't know the grade
The value of a diamond depends on its cut, its clarity, its colour and its carat weight. A local jeweler can give you the answer you want.
no
Your question is not clear. Is it referring to Diamond carat or Gold karat. This is because both have different meaning. While, Carat refers to weight of diamond (or gemstones), Karat refers to purity of gold. Check the link.
22 carat gold=4.4g (As 1 Carat gold=0.2g).
The value of anything is worth what someone will pay you for it. Regardless of its vintage, a two-carat diamond's value is based on its cut, colour, carat weight and clarity. Best practices dictate that you take your jewelery to a certified gemologist and pay for documentation about the diamond and about the metal in the ring.
The value would depend on the number of diamonds to make up the total 0.50ct and the quality as regards colour, clarity, etc. Assume 12-14 full-cut diamonds to make up the 0.50 carat weight with very good colour and clarity.
It depends on the carat that it is but I can tell you that 11g of 9 carat gold would be about £133
Your answer depends on whether the 10 karat refers to the metal or to the size of the diamond -- (properly 10 carat diamond).A diamond is valued according to its carat weight, its colour, its cut and its clarity.Gold is valued according to the percentage of gold contained in the metal. Ten karat gold -- based on pure gold at 24 karats, is less than 50% pure gold.Take your jewelry to a local jeweler who can help you value the piece.