Of cource another diamond! A diamond is the toughtest rock.
A diamond-tipped tool cuts a diamond.
You may be thinking of a mine cut, a cut of diamond favoured in the early 1800s. You can read more about this cut and its place within the history of diamond cuts, below.
If there is a tip, it is called culet. Some diamond cuts have no 'tip' or point.You can read more about facets of diamonds and their names, below.
According to the site, below:"Crown - the portion of the diamond between its girdle and its table - the Crown angle in the well-cut diamond should be 33 to 35 degrees."There, you can read more about diamond cuts.
The facets in a diamond will depend on the shape of the diamond. different cuts will present a different amount of facets. example are such as this. Round Brilliant Cut, The round brilliant cut has 58 total facets. The heart cut diamond usually contains 59 facets other cuts contain different amounts of facets. You chose a cut and ask about how many facets are in that particular cut.
A diamond-tipped tool cuts a diamond.
The diamond cutter taught the intern how a diamond cuts diamond as they cut and polished the raw stone.
Diamond is hardest Diamond cuts glass Glass does not cut diamond
see if it cuts glass..any diamond can cut through glass
There is no one "popular" cut for a diamond. There are as many cuts as there are brides.
Square Cuts!
A diamond cuts bark, although it's probably not the best tool for the job.
The Cullinan Diamond was cut into nine separate gemstones, as below.
A diamond will cut glass.
Princess cut. They can retain 80% of the raw diamond and make less cuts while retaining only 50% of the raw diamond in a round or brilliant cut diamond and making more cuts to give the brilliant appearance.
A diamond cutter cuts diamond stones depending on the highlights of the particular stone that s/he wants to preserve. These are its colour and its clarity. Then a cut is planned to preserve the highest carat weight for the stone.
Professional diamond cutters use a mallet and diamond-tipped, hardened steel chisel to cleave a diamond along its natural plane, or use a diamond-tipped saw to remove unwanted material from a rough stone. In either case, it's not the metal that cuts the diamond, it's the diamond tips: only a diamond can 'cut' a diamond. Read more about cutting diamonds, below.