Retrieved from: https://24carat.co.uk/frame.php?url=a2zofdiamonds.html (2019-10-03)
English term | Definition |
---|---|
1 | Type 1 diamonds contain nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
1a, | Type 1 diamonds contain nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
1b, | Type 1 diamonds contain nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
2, | Type 2 diamonds contain little or no nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
2a, | Type 2 diamonds contain little or no nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
2b | Type 2 diamonds contain little or no nitrogen. See Diamond Types |
4Cs, 4C's | The four main quality aspects for consumers to consider when buying diamonds, according to De Beers. |
6 | The atomic number of carbon, of which diamond is composed. |
10 Reasons | Ten reasons why you should never accept a diamond ring from anyone, under any circumstances, even if they really want to give you one, by the The Center for Popular Economics. |
47th Street | West 47th Street is the central location of the diamond industry in New York and the USA. |
58 | There are 58 facets on a round brilliant cut diamond, including the culet. |
100 Points | 100 points = 1 carat. |
Abrasion, Abrasions | Antique, and other old or heavily used diamonds can have abrasions, tiny nicks along facet junctions, producing white fuzzy lines instead of sharp crisp facet edges. |
Abrasive, Abrasive | To wear down. Industrial diamonds are used as abrasives in grinding wheels and drill bits, and also used in finer grades (smaller particle size) to polish materials. |
Academy Awards (Oscars) | Each year, a number of stars and celebrities are used to promote diamonds. |
Acronyms | Acronyms of D.I.A.M.O.N.D. include Defense Intrusion Analysis & Monitoring Desk, Development and Integration of Accurate Mathematical Operations in Numerical Data-Processing, and Dow Industrial Average Model New Deposit Shares. |
Adamant Research Laboratory | De Beers established the Adamant Research Laboratory in 1956 to intensify research into diamond synthesis. In 1958 De Beers produced its first synthetic diamond, and commissioned a synthesis plant in 1959. |
Adamantine | Refers to the surface lustre of diamond. |
Adamas | The word diamond comes from the ancient Greek word adamas (αδαμας), meaning unconquerable. |
Africa | Africa dominated diamond production during the 20th century, with mining activity centred in Botswana and South Africa and concentrated in the hands of De Beers. But, although Africa is still the centre of the industry, the last decade has seen an expansion of production in Canada and Russia. |
AGS, A.G.S., American Gem Society | The American Gem Society was established in 1934 with a vision to create an association of fine jewelry retailers dedicated to setting and maintaining the highest possible standards of business ethics and professionalism in the jewelry industry, according to its website. |
Anglo American Corporation | Anglo American Corporation was founded in 1917 by Sir Ernest Oppenheimer to exploit the gold mining potential of the East Rand. Owns about 45% of De Beers. |
Anglo American PLC | Anglo American plc was formed in May 1999 through the combination of Anglo American Corporation of South Africa (AACSA) and Minorco. |
ASEA, A.S.E.A, Allmana Avenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget | Swedish electrical company which was the first to synthesize diamond, on 16th February 1953, headed by eccentric scientist Baltzar von Platen. |
Amsterdam | Amsterdam, was a major diamond cutting center in the nineteenth century, but lost almost all its gem cutters to Antwerp, due in part to strict working conditions imposed on the Dutch diamond-cutting factories by labour unions in the prewar years. |
Allnatt | A 102.29 carat cushion cut diamond certified by the GIA as Fancy Vivid Yellow, VS2 clarity. |
Alluvial | Many diamonds are sourced from alluvial deposits in existing or previous river beds. Alluvial diamonds are usually of gem quality, probably because lower grade stones would have been damaged or destroyed. |
Anchor Mark | The Birmingham, UK, Assay Office have recently started a diamond grading and certification service using Anchor Mark as a trade mark. |
Angle, Angles | To achieve maximum brilliance, there are many angles which are important in diamond cutting. Angles determine proportion. |
Angola | Diamonds were discovered in Angola in 1913. Since 25 years of civil war ended in 2002, Angolan production should be important, but there are still problems. Although Angola is rich in gem quality diamond deposits, its output has been variable following long periods of civil war or other armed conflict. |
Anniversaries | De Beers invented and have promoted the concept of anniversary bands or eternity rings. |
Anniversary | The sixtieth (60th) anniversary is a diamond jubilee, also we have recently seen the seventy fifth described as a diamond wedding anniversary. |
Antwerp, Anvers, Antwerpen | A diamond trading centre since about 1300, it grew in importance in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as probably the world's most important cutting centre. It is still one of the main international diamond trading cities. Centred around Hoveniersstraat, Schupstraat, Rijfstraat and Pelikaanstraat. |
Antwerp Diamond Bank | Antwerp Diamond Bank was founded back in 1934 by the three leading Belgian banks and Henfin, a holding company, owned by the De Beers Group. It is now owned by KBC and currently has offices in Antwerp, Geneva, New York, Hong Kong and Mumbai. |
Antwerp Diamond Bourse | A meeting place for dealers to trade, mainly polished diamonds. |
Antwerp Rose | A hexagonal rose cut with 12 upper facets, and a flat base facet. |
Apollo Diamonds | In 2003, Apollo Diamonds Inc of Boston Massachusetts announced they were to market CVD grown diamonds including pure white, light pink, blue and black. |
Appraise, Appraisal | Appraisal is carried out on rough and polished diamonds at many stages to asses quality and market values. |
Argyle | Argyle Mine in Western Australia, owned by RTZ, opened in 1985, had produced about 650 million carats by open cast mining, and will probably change to underground pit methods from 2007. The Argyle mine is also famous for pink and other coloured diamonds. |
Arrows, Hearts and | An optical pattern discernable in some well-proportioned diamonds, and marketed as a demonstration of excellent cutting. |
Assurance Programme | Best Practice Principles is an assurance programme to be rolled out across the entire De Beers group, as well as to Sightholders and their business partners "to enhance and uphold the fine values diamonds represent". |
Auction Prices | Although we do not necessarily believe that auctions are the best way to buy and sell diamonds, auction results are published, and can form some basis for price guides. |
Aurora Collection | An important collection of natural fancy colour (coloured) diamonds, started by Alan Bronstein, and catalogued in the 750 page book Collecting & Classifying Coloured Diamonds by Stephen C. Hofer. |
Australia | Diamonds were discovered in Australia in 1851, and Australia remains a major producer. Probably the world's largest producer by volume. |
Ayer | US Advertising agency for De Beers from 1938, created the slogan "A Diamond is Forever" under its president Gerald M. Lauck. |
Baguette | A rectangular or oblong step or trap cut used for diamonds and other gemstones. |
Balance | A diamond balance is any scale or balance specially designed for weighing diamonds, and is calibrated in carats, often with a resolution of 1/1000 of a carat. |
Banana | A colour description used for certain fancy brownish yellow diamonds. |
Banque Diamantaire ( Suisse ) S.A. | The French name of The Diamond Bank (Switzerland) Ltd. |
Barion | An early forerunner of the princess cut, an improved facetting arrangement for baguette or square diamonds introduced in 1971 by Basil Watermeyer and his wife Marion. |
Baroque | Any irregularly shaped diamond. Also any jewellery from the Baroque period of the 17th and 18th centuries or in similar style. |
Bead | Diamonds are sometimes drilled for threading as beads. |
Bearded, Bearding | Small stress cracks around the girdle caused by bruting (rounding) too quickly or with too much force. |
Best Diamonds | A typical diamond FAQ is "where do the best diamonds come from". There is no single quick answer, apart from the slightly facetious "in the ground". We are in process of preparing a more complete answer which will be linked from here when ready. |
Best Practice Principles | An "Assurance Programme" to be rolled out across the entire De Beers group, as well as to Sightholders and their business partners "to enhance and uphold the fine values diamonds represent". |
Betrothal | A slightly old fashioned word for engagement (to marry). A mutual promise to marry. In earlier times this was considered fully or partially binding. Mary of Burgundy is often cited as the first woman to receive a diamond betrothal or engagement ring. |
Bezel | Generally as rim or sloping side. The bezel facets of a diamond are also known as kite facets. |
BHP Billiton | The second most active diamond prospecting company after De Beers. Owns the Ekati mine in Canada, producing 4% and 6% of world's diamonds by volume and value respectively. Markets using CanadaMark brand name. |
Big, Biggest | The biggest diamond known is a star 'Lucy' discovered in February 2004 by Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Biggest on earth are listed on Large & Famous Diamonds. |
Black Orlov | The Orlov (or Orloff) Black) is a large famous diamond. Although not the largest black diamond, it is probably the most famous because of a supposed curse. It was originally called the Eye of Brahma, but was recut into three smaller stones. |
Black Star of Africa | At over 200 carats, this is about the 11th largest diamond in the world. |
Black | Probably the least attractive colour for diamond, although there seems good demand for treated black diamonds. The main attraction surely being the excellent surface lustre. Black is technically the complete absence of any colour. Many black diamonds have poor surface quality and are probably partially carbonado. |
Black Diamond | "Black diamond" is a term used in American ski resorts to designate a steep slope or one which involves challenging terrain. So called because the marker signs show a black diamond (lozenge) shape on a white background. |
Blackpool | The location of the Chard office and showroom. |
Blue | A very rare and valuable colour for diamonds. All natural blue diamonds are type 2b, and contain traces of boron. |
Blemish | An external mark or imperfection on a diamond, implicitly only slight and capable of being removed. |
Blocker, Blocking | Diamond cutter who grinds or cuts the first 18 facets being table, culet, and first eight facets on the crown and pavilion. A brillianteer polished the final 40 facets. |
Blood Diamond | Another name for Conflict Diamond. Also the name of a 2006 film set in Sierra Leone in 1999. |
Blue Book | The CIBJO Blue Book is a definitive set of standards for the grading, methodology and nomenclature standards for diamonds, coloured gemstones and pearls, in which the latter incorporates all organic materials. |
Blue Ground, Blueground | Unweathered kimberlite rock, normally diamondiferous, and named after Kimberley in South Africa. |
Blue White, Blue-White | Originally describing near white diamonds with strong blue fluorescence, often misleadingly used or abused term to confer the idea of whiter than white. |
Boart | From Dutch boort, imperfectly crystallized diamond or diamond fragments used as an abrasive. Round, or shot, bort, found at Kimberley, was valuable for diamond drill points. Also spelt bort. |
Body Colour | The colour of light seen through a diamond without any dispersion, usually viewed through the side of a stone. A diamond's actual colour. |
Bort | From Dutch boort, imperfectly crystallized diamond or diamond fragments used as an abrasive. Round, or shot, bort, found at Kimberley, was valuable for diamond drill points. Also spelt boart. |
Botswana | The most important source of rough diamonds by value if not in volume. |
Bourse | One of about 25 associations or clubs with premises for dealers in rough or polished diamonds. A member of the World Federation of Diamond Bourses. |
Beurs voor Diamanthandel | Antwerp Diamond Bourse. A meeting place for dealers to trade, mainly polished diamonds. |
Bow Tie, Bowtie | An optical effect adversely affecting marquise and other fancy cuts of diamonds, can be minimised by careful cutting using best proportions and angles. |
Brabant Rose | A hexagonal rose cut with 12 upper facets, and a flat base facet, also called Antwerp rose. |
Bracelet, Bracelets | A piece of jewellery usually worn around the wrist, often containing diamonds. |
Brazil | Diamonds were discovered in Brazil in 1725, when it became the main source of diamonds. By the 19th century, most of its diamond deposits were depleted, and few diamonds are mined today. |
Briefjes | A packet or paper specially produced for containing diamond parcels. They usually contain several inner leaves of crinkly bluish paper, designed to make the diamonds look whiter. Learning to fold and refold them is an acquired skill. |
Brilliance | The brightness and sparkle of a diamond, not to be confused with its fire or dispersion. |
Brilliant Cut | A diamond cut using modern facetting layouts, as described by Tolkowsky and others, with 58 facets. Normally round, but there are modified variants in other shapes. |
Brillianteer, Brillianteering | Person who grinds or polishes the fourty final facets on a brilliant cut diamond after the "blocker" has cut the table and the "eights" on the crown and pavilion. |
Briolette | A long teardrop shaped diamond with rose cut facets, sometimes drilled, used as a pendant. |
Broche, Mazel & | Jewish phrase often said at the conclusion of a diamond trade by the seller to the buyer, meaning good luck and god be with you. |
Broker | A specialist who introduces diamond buyers and sellers, earning his commission on the value of deals done. |
Brooch, Brooches | Jewellery worn on the lapel or chest, sometimes containing diamonds. |
Brown | Attractive or vivid brown diamonds are rare, and classed as fancy coloured, slightly brownish stones (off-white) are slightly less common than slightly yellow, and offer reasonably priced alternatives to colourless stones. |
Bruise | An inclusion consisting of surface crumbling, often accompanied by tiny, root like feathers, usually caused by external trauma such as a knock. |
Bruting | The process of rounding a diamond to form its girdle, customarily done by grinding one diamond against another on a rotating wheel. Some American retailers call this girdling. It may also be called rounding. |
Burn, Burnt, Burned | A facet may appear foggy, whitish, or burnt, as a result of the cutter polishing the facet against the grain, or otherwise allowing the diamond to overheat causing the surface to oxydise. |
Buying Office, Buying Offices | Offices set up, usually in or close to diamond mining areas by individuals or companies including De Beers, to purchase rough diamonds from miners. |
Cachet | An indication of approved or superior status, "seal of approval", also sometimes used for cachette. Both from French cacher, to seal. |
Cachette | A sealed packet containing diamonds bought in a trade deal, together with agreed payment terms. |
Cairo Star | Variation on the modern round brilliant cut with 74 facets. |
Canada | Diamond prospecting started in Canada in the 1960's or earlier, kimberlite was found in the 1990's, and the first commercial mine opened in 1991. Canada now produces over 12 million carats annually worth over $2 billion according to some sources. |
Canary | Popular name for a vivid fancy yellow diamond. |
Cape | Originally Cape Colony in South Africa, also the almost obsolete name of a yellowish colour, corresponding to GIA grades O, P,and Q. The entire series from near E to Z colours are known as the cape series. |
Carat, Carats | Defines and explains the terms carat and carats as applied to diamonds other gemstone and gold alloys. |
Carat Weight | The weight of diamonds is measured in carats, a metric carat being a fifth of a gram. |
Carbon | Diamonds are composed entirely, or almost entirely, of carbon. |
Carbon Spot | A misnomer. As diamonds are composed almost entirely of carbon, any black spots in them are unlikely to be carbon. |
Carbonado | Imperfectly or partially crystalised diamond. |
Carnegie Institution Geophysical Laboratory | In 2004, the Carnegie Institution's Geophysical Laboratory announced it could produce large gem quality diamonds 100 times faster than previously. |
Cartel | De Beers appears to have operated a cartel for most of its existence. |
Cartier | A well known jeweller, and also the previous name of the Taylor Burton diamond. |
Cavity | A hole or void in a diamond or other gemstone, either internal or extending to the surface. Internal cavities may naturally contain gas, liquid, solid, a combination of two or three of these, and there may be phase changes depending on ambient temperature. |
Cecil Rhodes | A financier, statesman, colonialist, and British imperialist. He formed De Beers, acquired and maintained a near monopoly on diamond mining and production, which still endures over 130 years later. |
Celebrity, Celebrities | Although many celebrities have owned or been connected with impressive or famous diamonds in the past, there is a modern trend for diamonds to be lent out to celebrities in return for the media attention which the pairing can attain, in a similar manner to designer couture. |
Centenary | A large and famous diamond, unveiled in 1988 for the centenary of De Beers. 599 carats in the rough, it was cut to a gem weighing over 273 carats. It is remarkable also for being D colour, and second only to the Cullinan for its combination of size and quality. |
CERN, C.E.R.N., European Centre for Nuclear Research | CERN - CVD Diamond Radiation Detector Development. "Diamond is a material with such extraordinary physical properties that we wish to explore its use as a particle detector". |
Certificated | A diamond which has been graded and certified or certificated by a gemmological laboratory. |
Certificates, Certification | Documents issued by gem labs attesting the genuineness and stating the quality of a diamond or other gemstone. |
Certified | A diamond which has been laboratory graded, and certified as to quality. We offer certified diamonds for sale. |
Chameleon | Name for rare colour change diamonds. |
Champagne | Apart from the world famous French origin-marked sparkling wine sparkling wine, champagne is used rather romantically to describe diamonds which might otherwise to considered to be a slightly "off" colour. |
Channel Setting | A setting style or method where there is no metal showing between stones. In our opinion, better avoided unless very well executed. |
Chard | Owner and operator of this website. |
Cheap | A word which is not usually associated with diamonds or jewellery. It is considered to have negative connotations. |
Chemical Vapour Deposition | Synthetic diamond can be made by the CVD process. First achieved in 1952 by William Eversole of Union Carbide Corporation of the USA. |
Chemistry | All diamonds are composed of carbon, although most have tiny amounts of impurities. |
Chiffre | A rose cut with three facets each of which has a curved outer edge, forming an equilateral curved triangle, similar to the rotor shape of a Wankel engine. |
China | Only relatively recently has China located and started to extract diamonds. It is also a growing cutting centre, and it may in the next few years be the biggest consumer growth demand area. |
Chip, Chips, Chippings | Chips were possibly invented in Belgium, and are served with mayonnaise. We explain that Chip, Chips, and Chippings are words which are usually not applied to diamonds. |
CIBJO | Confédération International de la Bijouterie, Joaillerie, Orfèvrerie des Diamantes, Perles et Pierres, in English International Confederation of Jewellery, Silverware, Diamonds and Stones. A world jewellery confederation. |
Clarity | The clearness, purity, absence, or presence of inclusions in a diamond. |
Clarity Enhanced, Clarity Enhancement | The "improvement" in the apparent clarity of a diamond usually by filling surface cracks with glass. Not recommended. |
Clean | An word used informally to mean flawless, or at least to infer flawlessness. |
Cleaning | At the mines, diamonds are cleaned using a mixture of methods, including boiling in acid. For domestic cleaning of diamonds or other jewellery, warm soapy water works well. Ultrasonic cleaning tanks can be used with care. |
Cleavage | The tendency of a crystallised mineral to break along certain definite directions producing more or less smooth surfaces. We prefer Karolina Kurkova's cleavage. |
Cleavages | A term used when sorting rough diamonds, referring to irregularly shaped or broken crystals. |
Cleaving | Method of splitting a diamond along a grain. |
Cloud | Area with many microscopically small inclusions but which impair clarity. |
Cloudy | Some low clarity diamonds with significant cloudy or milky areas get sold to consumers with a limited knowledge. |
Closed Culet | A culet which consists of a point rather than a facet. |
Club | Nowadays diamond clubs and bourses tend to be interchangeable. Originally, a diamond club was primarily a place to trade rough diamonds, and a bourse was for polished goods. |
Cluster | Diamond ring or other jewellery containing a number of diamonds. Also a number of kimberlite pipes occurring in close proximity. |
Coated, Coating | Many rough diamonds are covered by a skin or coating which can mask their potential appearance. |
Coating, Applied | Diamonds have sometimes had a coloured coating applied to them for fraudulent purposes. In recent years, new high-tech coating methods have appeared. |
Cognac | A somewhat romanticised name for a slightly brownish diamond colour. |
Color, Colour | One of the 4 C's affecting diamond quality and price. Colourless gets promoted as the best, but only because other attractive colours are extremely rare. |
Colorimeter | A proprietary machine for grading diamond colour. |
Color, Colour Enhanced, Enhancement | The improvement of a diamond's colour by irradiation, HPHT (High Pressure, High Temperature), or coating (undesirable). |
Coloured | Fancy coloured diamonds are rare, attractive and valuable. |
Colourless, Colorless | What most people describe as white. Promoted as being the best "colour", mainly because real colours are so rare that there is little point promoting them. |
Collection | A term used by De Beers when sorting rough, indicating higher quality and value stones. |
Collet, Collets | A collet is a collar or bezel used as a diamond setting. |
Commercial | Used meaning medium to low quality as opposed to fine gem quality. Cheap. |
Commercial White | A dealers term for "off-white". |
Commodity | Industrial diamonds are an important commodity, gem quality diamonds are not sufficiently homogenous to be classed or used as a commodity. |
Compactness | Diamonds provide a highly compact store of wealth or value, which makes them easy to conceal, transport, store, or smuggle. |
Comparison | Comparison of diamonds can be quite difficult for the amateur or consumer, but it can be important to ensure you get the quality you expect. Even laboratories perform much of their grading by comparing one stone with a stone of known quality. |
Condé Pink | An historic 9.01 carat pink diamond given to Louis de Bourbon in 1643 by King Louis XIII of France, and now in the Bourbon family museum in the Chateau de Chantilly |
Congo | The Republic of the Congo is another important source of diamonds, which are its main export, but years of conflict have weakened its economy. Probably still the 4th largest producer by value. |
Conflict | Much publicised aspect of diamond exploitation. |
Consolidated | De Beers Consolidated Mines (DBCM or D.B.C.M.). Formed in 1888, by Cecil Rhodes merging his own holdings with those of Barney Barnato. |
Conspiracy, Conspiracies | There was a conspiracy to steal the diamonds from the Millennium Dome exhibition, including the Millennium Diamond. De Beers have also been believed to have been party to numerous conspiracies to retain control of its diamond monopoly during its long history. |
Consumer Confidence Programme | A De Beers initiative to promote "disclosure", and provide training and advice for diamond professionals including retailers. |
Crap | Famous description by Gerald Ratner of some of his products, causing the share price of Ratner's to collapse. Ratner and / or Ratners is a trade mark of Signet Group PLC, owner of H. Samuel, Ernest Jones, and others. |
Crater of | Arkansas's diamond site, the Crater of Diamonds State Park, is the eighth largest diamond-bearing deposit in the world. Located in southwest Arkansas, this is the world's only diamond-bearing site open to the public, to prospect for real diamonds. |
Created | A description of synthetic diamonds as opposed to natural ones. |
Critical Angle | The angle of incidence of light measured from the normal (90%) beyond which Total Internal Reflection will occur. From diamond to air, this is a very low figure of 24.4°. |
Crown | The top part of a diamond, above the girdle. |
Crown Angle | The angle between the girdle and the crown of a diamond (taken as the kite facets). |
Crown Height | The height or depth of the top part of a diamond, above the girdle. |
Crown Jewels | Collection of diamonds, other gemstones, jewellery and regalia, belonging, usually to the British Royal Family, although the term could apply to the equivalent collections of other countries. |
Crystal | A diamond is a large single crystal of carbon. |
Crystal Structure | Diamonds normally crystalise with a cubic structure, as a face centred cube (FCC or F.C.C.), but can crystalise with a hexagonal structure. |
CSO, C.S.O., Central Selling Organisation | Part of the De Beers group of companies. |
Cube, Cubes | A cube is a rough diamond with approximately cubic shape. |
Cubic | Diamonds crystallise in the cubic system. |
Cubic Zirconia | Cubic Zirconia, CZ, or C.Z., is the most successful diamond simulant. Chemical formula ZrO2. |
Culet | The point or small facet on the bottom of most round or brilliant cut diamonds, as opposed to a keel on other cuts. |
Cullinan, Cullinan I, Cullinan II | The Cullinan was the largest rough diamond ever found (at 3,106 cts), and the Cullinan I was until recently the largest polished diamond (530 cts). It forms part of the British Crown Jewels. |
Cultured | A word used to describe synthetic diamonds, in parallel with cultured pearls. |
Cushion | A shape of diamond, four sided with curved sides, rather like an old television screen. |
Cut | One of the four C's of diamond quality. Also a portion of a diamond parcel split at a random point rather than by selection. Used when a buyer wishes to buy a smaller parcel than is being offered by the seller. |
Cuts Glass | That fact that diamond will cut glass is often cited, by the less knowledgeable, as some kind of proof that something is diamond. A claim often made by snake oil salesmen and other charlatans selling imitations and attempting to impress potential mugs punters customers. |
Cutter | One who cuts or polished diamonds. |
Cutting | The process of cutting, grinding, or polishing rough diamonds into finished goods. |
CVD | Synthetic diamond can be made by the CVD (Chemical Vapour Deposition) process. |
CZ, C.Z. | Cubic zirconia, the best simulant yet produced, although there are arguments in favour of moissanite. Chemical formula ZrO2. |
Dahlia Cut | One of a number of "flower cuts" developed by Gaby Tolkowsky in about 1997 for De Beers. |
De Beers | Dominant diamond mining and marketing company since the nineteenth century, believed to have a near world monopoly, together with various subsidiaries and group members. |
Deep | Usually meaning a diamond which has been cut too deep which maximises weight, but sacrifices brilliance. Also refers to deep mines. |
Depth | The height of a diamond from top to bottom, table to culet. |
Detection | A reference to the ability to detect diamond simulants, synthetics, and treatments. |
Density | Density is defined as the ratio of the mass of an object to its volume. The density of diamond is 3.52 grams per cubic centimeter. |
D, D. Colour | D colour denotes colourless on the GIA scale. |
Diagem | Diagem is a Canadian diamond exploration, production, and marketing company. The name diagem has also been used for a diamond simulant. |
Diamantaire | French for "diamond-cutter", person or company who polishes diamonds. |
DiamantKring | An Antwerp club and meeting place for dealers mainly in rough diamonds. |
Diamonaire | An imitation diamond (simulant), composed of CZ. |
Diamond | Diamond is an isomer of carbon. The word diamond is often used incorrectly to describe a lozenge shape. The diamond in baseball refers to the infield or the whole pitch, so named because of its lozenge shape. |
Diamond Amendment Bill | A proposed South African law to give the state control over its diamond deposits. |
Diamond Bank | The Diamond Bank (Switzerland) Ltd. was founded in Geneva in 1982 with the aim of further developing the financial needs of the international diamond and jewellery community. It is majority owned by KBC which also owns Antwerp Diamond Bank. |
Diamond in the Rough | An expression meaning somebody or something having exceptionally good qualities or the potential for greatness but lacking polish and refinement. |
Diamond Jubilee | The diamond jubilee is often stated as the seventy fifth (75th) anniversary, but a diamond jubilee is generally recognised as the sixtieth (60th) anniversary. |
Diamondoid | Diamondoids were first discovered and isolated from Czechoslovakian petroleum in 1933. They have the same internal carbon structure as diamond crystals. Diamondoids include adamantane, diamantane, triamantane & tetradiamantane. |
DiamondPlus | A piece of equipment developed by De Beers primarily to detect HPHT enhancement of natural type 2 diamonds. |
Diamonds | The plural of diamond. Other meaning include the name of one of the four suits in playing cards, the third-highest ranking suit in contract bridge. Diamonds is also the title of a 1975 movie (film) with Robert Shaw and Shelley Winters, and a 1999 movie with Kirk Douglas and Dan Aykroyd. |
Diamonds from Sierra Leone | A rap song by Kayne West using audio sampling from Diamonds are Forever. There are at least two different sets of lyrics, all of which sound as if they might mean something, but probably don't. |
DiamondSure | A piece of equipment developed by De Beers to enable rapid screening of Type 2 diamonds including synthetics, so that they can be further tested. |
DiamondView | A piece of equipment developed by De Beers to help distinguish type 2 CVD synthetics, most of these show orange luminescence in ultraviolet light, although it is possible to produce high quality ones which exhibit little or no orange luminescence. Most natural type 2 diamonds show blue luminescence. |
Diamond Wedding Anniversary | The diamond wedding anniversary is often stated as the seventy fifth (75th), but a diamond jubilee is generally recognised as the sixtieth (60th) anniversary. |
Diamonique | A proprietary brand of imitation diamond, usually made of Cubic Zirconia (C.Z.), owned and marketed by QVC. |
Direction | Direction is important in diamonds and most gemstones for a number of reasons. Hardness is directional as it depends on "grain" direction. The optimal direction of cutting and polishing also depends on the optical axes of many stones including some diamond simulants. |
Dirty Diamonds | A new song and album by Alice Cooper. Also refers to conflict diamonds, keeping diamonds clean, and a book. |
Disclosure | The ethical and legal requirement to disclose to any purchaser, any treatment or process which a diamond has undergone, rendering it anything but completely natural. |
Discount, Discounts | If you are prepared to haggle, and pay cash, you can get a discount at almost any retail jeweller. Our prices are already at fully discounted cash and carry prices. |
Discovery | Modern diamond discovery is carried out by geologists employed by exploration and resource companies, usually be searching for kimberlite pipes. |
Dispersion | Dispersion is the ability of a diamond or other gemstone, to differentially refract light of different wavelengths (colours), thereby splitting apparently white light into spectral colours. Fire. Diamond has very high dispersion at 0.044, which is one of the factors making it an ideal gemstone. |
Dop | A holder for diamonds while they are being cut and polished, originally made of solder, modern ones are controlled by computer to enable further mechanisation, and accuracy of shape. |
Double Diamond | "Double Diamond" is an American skiing term for an extreme, expert-only ski slope, designated by a sign with 2 black diamonds. Also known as a double black diamond. Double Diamond is also the name of an English beer. |
Double Refraction | Although diamond is normally singly refractive, many gemstones are doubly refractive (bi-refringent), and diamonds can also be doubly refractive because of internal strain or inclusions. |
Draw, Draws, Drawing | In diamond dealers' jargon, a diamond which is not pure white (colourless) is often said to draw colour. |
Dresden | The name of the largest known green diamond. |
Drill, Drills, Drilling | It is now possible to drill neatly into a diamond using a laser. This is most often done to remove dark stains of iron oxide within inclusions, but could also be done to create a diamond bead. |
Drill Bit | Because of its hardness, diamond is often used in high quality or high performance drill bits. |
Durable, Durability | Diamond is one of the hardest, toughest, and most durable of substances. |
Dust | Very small rough diamonds used as abrasives, also called diamond powder. |
Dutch Rose | A style of rose cutting with 24 facets on the crown, sometimes 6 large, and 18 smaller. |
EGL, E.G.L., European Gemological Laboratory | European Gemological Laboratory claims to be an international independent leader in diamond grading and training for all diamond business solutions. |
Eight Cut | Also called "single cut". Diamonds, usually small, with only 18 facets instead of the full 58 on a brilliant cut. |
Eights | The first eight facets cut on each of the crown and pavilion of a diamond, placed or ground by a "blocker". |
Element Six | The name of the former De Beers Industrial Diamonds group of companies. "Element Six" is a reference to carbon's atomic number 6. |
Emerald Cut | A square of rectangular shape with cut (mitred) corners, forming an eight sided figure (octagon), and step cut; derives it name because it is the commonest shape of cut for emeralds. Looks glassy, and modern facetting styles such as radiant cut produces more brilliant and attractive stones. |
Engagement | De Beers advertising over the last century has established a "tradition" that a woman should receive a diamond ring as an engagement symbol. |
Enhance, Enhanced, Enhancement | To improve the colour or clarity of a diamond in some manner. See colour enhancement or clarity enhancement. |
Eppler Cut | Eppler devised the specifications for this "Practical Fine Cut" in 1939. |
Eternity | De Beers have extended the diamond engagement ring "tradition", by brainwashing us to believe that a diamond eternity ring should also be a tradition on the first wedding anniversary, or the birth of a first child. |
Eureka | The name of a famous diamond. |
European Cut | A European version of "ideal" cut used and preferred in Europe following the research of Tolkowsky and others. |
Extra Facet | An additional facet polished onto a diamond, usually to remove a "natural" or small surface blemish. |
Exceptional White | The name of the top colour in the CIBJO colour grading scales, equating to D and E colours in the GIA scale. |
Eye Clean | No visible inclusions with the naked eye, therefore at least SI in clarity. |
Face | A flat or flattish side or plane, particularly in a rough diamond crystal. |
Face Up | Refers to the viewing angle of a polished diamond, so that the table faces approximately towards the viewer, rather than the viewer looking through the side of the stone. |
Facet, Facets | The flat surface or planes of a polished diamond. |
Facetting, Faceting | The process of grinding and polishing flat faces or sides on diamonds. |
Famous | Most famous diamonds are so because of their impressively large size, others because of their colour, or a combination of these two factors. |
Fancy Colour | Most diamonds are near-colourless, but strongly coloured diamonds are rare and valuable, and are usually known as "fancies". |
Fancy Shape | Applied to any shape diamond except round. |
FAQs, F.A.Q.s | Most frequently asked diamond questions should find their answers on this page, or linked from it. |
Feather | The apt description of a common type of diamond inclusion, an imperfection in the crystal structure of the diamond, believed to be due to stress, many amateurs call this a crack, and professionals may refer to it as a fracture, especially if it reaches the surface. Under magnification, it does appear very much like a feather. Can be quite transparent, or may be opaque and white. |
Field, Charles | Partner of Henry Morse, who developed the first diamond bruting machine (to grind girdles), and other diamond cutting equipment. |
Fifty Eight Facets | The number of facets on a brilliant cut diamond, including the culet. |
Fill, Filled, Filling | Refers to the practice of filling open fissures in diamonds, usually with glass. It is not entirely satisfactory, and we would not recommend it. It should always be notified to the buyer, to do otherwise would be dishonest and fraudulent. |
Finger, Fingers | The "Ring Finger" is the third finger on each hand, but the left hand is the conventional finger for a wedding ring, engagement ring, or eternity ring. De Beers have recently started promoting the "RIght Hand Ring". |
Finish | A word which is loosely used to imply the quality of polish and symmetry on a diamond. |
Fire | The bright flashes of coloured light given off by diamonds due to their differential refraction of light, known as dispersion. |
Fire Rose Cut | One of a number of "flower cuts" developed by Gaby Tolkowsky in about 1997 for De Beers. |
Firestone | Firestone Diamonds plc is a UK-based international diamond mining and exploration company with operations in the Namaqualand region of South Africa, Botswana and the United States. |
Fish Eye, Fisheye | A detrimental optical effect in diamonds which are cut too shallow, particularly with a shallow pavilion, or with an overlarge table. An opaque whitish area is actually an reflection of the girdle, but it does detract from the appearance of the stone. |
Fissure | A crack, gletz, feather, possibly reaching to the surface. |
Flash Effect | An optical effect seen in fracture filled diamonds which is a useful diagnostic. |
Flat | A lapidaries lapping wheel (lap) for grinding or polishing gemstones, and is often impregnated with diamond. A flat or relatively shallow piece of diamond rough. |
Flats | A term used in grading rough diamonds, applied to diamond crystals of irregular shape with flat parallel sides like pieces of broken glass. |
Flat Screen TVs | Using diamond dust may lead to cheaper wide and flat screen monitors and LCD TV screens, according to University of Bristol and Advance Nanotech. |
Flaw | In inclusion or other feature which is visible or reduces clarity in diamonds or other gems. |
Flawless | Without any inclusions or features adversely affecting clarity. |
Florentine | The name of a large famous diamond. |
For a Few Dollars More | How al Qaeda moved into the diamond trade, 1993 report by Global Witness. |
Fluorescence | Often mis-spelt as flourescence by those who should know better. The emission of visible light displayed by some diamonds and other gems when viewed in ultra-violet or other light. Cause frequent concern by consumers on discovering that one diamond or more in a cluster glow under "disco" lighting. |
Forever | Word connected with diamonds by the Ayer advertising agency in the phrase "A Diamond is Forever", also celebrated in a song of similar name "Diamonds are Forever" sung by Shirley Bassey in the 1971 James Bond film of the same name. |
Four Cs | The four well-known factors affecting the price of a diamond. |
Fracture | An inclusion in a diamond, usually one reaching the surface. |
Fracture Fill, Filled, Filling | A non-permanent and less than ideal method of improving the apparent clarity of diamonds by filling cracks in them with glass. |
Full Cut | With 58 facets, i.e. usually a brilliant cut, and usually round. |
Gabrielle Cut | A "triple brilliant cut" with 105 facets developed by Gaby (Gabi) Tolkowsky in about 1997. |
GAGTL, G.A.G.T.L. | Gemmological Association and Gem Testing Laboratory of Great Britain. Now Gem-A. |
Gauge, Gauges | Any of various devices and instruments used to estimate the weight of diamonds, by measuring or estimating physical dimensions, such as diameter, depth, length. Some are better than others. |
GE, G.E. General Electric | In 1955 the GE Research Laboratory announced the invention of the first reproducible process for making diamonds, a process that became the basis for GE's man-made industrial diamond business, which today is one of the world's major sources of industrial diamond abrasives. In 2000 GE Gem Technologies integrate high pressure / high temperature technology with knowledge of diamond structure to eliminate impurities and restore the color of rare high-purity diamonds, and market them as Bellataire Diamonds. |
Gem | Small article of great value or beauty, gemstone. |
Gem-A | Gemmological Association and Gem Testing Laboratory of Great Britain. Previously known as GAGTL, G.A.G.T.L.. |
Gem Defensive Programme | Described by Wired (wired.com) as a none too subtle campaign to warn jewelers and the public about the arrival of manufactured diamonds. |
Gemesis | Manufacture and market "Gemesis Cultured Diamonds, based in Sarasota, Florida, USA. |
Gemmologist, Gemologist | A person with expertise in gemmology, a gemstone expert. There are formal qualifications, such as F.G.A. (Fellow of the Gemmological Association) in the UK. |
Gemstone | Any organic or inorganic mineral or material, excluding metal, which is used to decorative effect in jewellery. Some argue that only natural, rare or valuable items should be included |
GE POL | Laser inscription on girdle of HPHT treated diamonds marketed by General Electric Company and Pegasus Overseas Limited. The GE POL name was briefly changed to Monarch, and then to Bellataire in 2000. |
Gerald | Famous member of the Ratner family, became Managing Director of his family's established retail jewellery business, expanded it greatly, acquiring H. Samuel and others, but was blamed for the share price drop after his "total crap" and other comments. Now operates as geraldonline, and is believe to be subject to an agreement barring him from using the Ratner name. |
Getter, Nitrogen | A "nitrogen getter" is an agent to attract and absorb nitrogen when growing synthetic diamonds, to obtain colourless diamonds rather than yellow ones. Aluminium has proved to be effective. |
GIA, G.I.A. | The Gemological Institute of America. Styles itself as the world's leading authority on diamonds and other gemstones. Market leader for diamond and gem certificates by virtue of its location and size. |
GIA in Grading Scam | |
Gipsy, Gypsy Setting | The gypsy setting is a recessed setting in which the stone is sunk into the metal. There are often engraved designs around the stone (especially star patterns). This type of setting was developed in the late 1800's and was often used for rings. The gypsy setting is also known as the "star setting." |
Girdle | The widest part of most diamonds, the middle between the crown and pavilion. May be rough (matt), polished or facetted. Even if facetted, it is only counted as one facet. |
Girdle Facet | Any of the facets adjacent to the girdle on a brilliant cut or other diamond, split into upper (crown) girdle facets, and lower (pavilion) girdle facets. |
Gletz | Dutch or Afrikaans for feather. Also spelt glatts, glatze, gles, and glets. |
Global Witness | An organisation set up in 1993 by three individuals to counter conflict and corruption in countries often rich in resources, and promote the welfare of the resident population. |
Global Witness Reports | Various reports by Global Witness into a number of unsavoury aspects of the exploration extraction and exploitation section of the diamond industry, leading to the Kimberley Process. |
Gold | Yellow precious metal used in most jewellery in various alloys. |
Golden Jubilee | The largest faceted diamond in the world, weighing 545.67 carats. |
Goods | An expression sometimes used by diamond dealers meaning "diamonds". |
Grade | A recognised measure of an aspect of quality, mainly clarity and colour, but can also be applied to proportion and other aspects. |
Grading | The process of appraising a diamond, and allocating grades to it. |
Grain | Diamond crystal have different strength bonds in different directions. These directions are known as grain rather like the grain in wood. Also an obsolescent unit of weight, equal to a quarter carat or 0.042 pennyweight, 0.002083 troy ounce, 0.0648 grams. |
Grainer | A quarter carat (approximately) diamond. A two-grainer would weight about a half carat, a three-grainer about 0.75 carats, and a four-grainer about one carat, etc. |
Graining | Internal Graining refers to internal irregular crystal growth. May appear milky, like faint lines or streaks, colored or reflective. |
Grease | Diamonds have an affinity for grease and oil. They act as "grease magnets". Grease and oil on the surface of diamonds reduces their effective RI and therefore their brilliance. |
Grease Tables | Because diamonds stick to grease, grease table are used in diamond mines, and have been since 1896, to help separate diamonds from crushed rock. |
Great Chrysanthemum | A 198.28-carat fancy brown pear shaped diamond. |
Green | A rare colour of diamond. |
Grit | Small pieces of rough diamond, used as industrial abrasives, may be natural or synthetic. |
Guinea | This west African country is currently about the world's tenth largest diamond producer by value. |
Gyémánt | Gyémánt is the Hungarian word for diamond. |
Hancock Red | Red diamond, while only small, at 0.90 carats, held the world record auction price per carat for any diamond, from 1987 to 2007, |
Hard, Harder Hardest | Diamond is the hardest known naturally occurring substance, although harder substances have been synthethised, including harder diamond! It is likely that naturally occurring harder substance will be discovered in the future, but these as likely to remain rare. |
Hardness | Hardness can be defined and measured in numerous ways. Mohs' hardness scale is the simplest and best known scale. Hardness is directional in most gemstones. |
Harry Winston | Beverley Hills jeweller with a celebrity client list. Has handled a number of large and famous diamonds. |
Hatton Garden | Street and surrounding area on London, one of the two main jewellery trade areas in Britain. |
Heart | A fancy shape of diamond, usually a modified brilliant cut. |
Hearts and Arrows | An optical pattern discernable in some well-proportioned diamonds, and marketed as a demonstration of excellent cutting. |
Heavy (Heavily) Spotted, HS, H.S. | A descriptive diamond clarity grade which appears to be becoming obsolete, two grades below P3 (I3). |
Herkimer | Village, Town, and County in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State. Quart crystals can be found by rockhounds. They are incorrectly and misleadingly described as "Herkimer Diamonds". |
Highest Price | There are various ways of considering the highest price paid for a diamond, total price, per carat price, and relative price in today's money. We will be adding a highest priced diamond page. |
Highest Price Per Carat | From 1987 to 2007, this record was held by the 0.90 carat Hancock Red, but in October 2007, this was beaten by a 6.04 carat octagonal blue diamond. |
Hofer, Stephen C. | Author of Collecting & Classifying Coloured Diamonds, An Illustrated Study of the Aurora Collection. |
Hope | The world's most famous, and infamous, blue diamond. Also the largest blue diamond, although it only just makes it into the top 100 largest diamonds. |
HRD, H.R.D., Hoge Raad voor Diamant | Translates as "Antwerp Diamond High Council" in English. Represents Belgium and the Belgian diamond industry. |
Hue | An aspect of colour, important factor in viewing and grading fancy coloured diamonds. |
I1, I2, I3, Included, Imperfect | I1, I2, and I3 are all grades in the GIA clarity scale. |
IDB, Illicit Diamond Buying | In South Africa there is a law prohibiting 'Illicit Diamond Buying' or IDB. Any rough diamond found on public land must be sold to the government who resells it to De Beers. |
Ideal, Ideal Cut | Theoretically perfect cutting proportions for (round brilliant cut) diamonds. Exact specifications vary. Many mathematical models ignore girdle thickness. |
IGI, I.G.I., International Gem Laboratory | Organisation with laboratories located in the heart of the gem & jewelry districts throughout the world, including New York, Antwerp, Mumbai, Bangkok and Tokyo. |
Illusion | A style of setting making a diamond appear larger than it is, usually by setting into "white" gold, rhodium plating, and diamond cutting the surrounding area of metal. |
ImaGem | ImaGem Inc. is a manufacturer of equipment for grading diamonds by colour, clarity, carat weight, cut, brilliance, intensity, sparkle, and fluorescence. |
Imitation | Anything other than diamond which imitates diamond. Other words used include simulant and fake. It is important to note that synthetic diamond is real diamond. An imitation can be natural or synthetic. |
Imperfect, Imperfection, I | Clarity grading term. |
Incident Ray | The name of a ray of light as it enters a diamond, or change of medium. |
Included | Possessing inclusions, mainly internal features which impair the brilliance or clarity of a diamond. |
Inclusion | An internal feature or imperfection which reduces the clarity or brilliance of a diamond. |
Incomparable | A large diamond weighing 890 carats in its rough state, 407.48 carats polished, the third largest diamond ever cut. |
India | Until the discovery of diamonds in Brazil about 1730, India was the only known source. All known Indian diamond sources are now depleted and uneconomic, but India is now an important cutting centre, mainly because of low labour costs. The first known reference to diamond is a Sanskrit manuscript, the Arthsastra ("The Lesson of Profit") by Kautiliya, a minister to Chandragupta of the Mauryan dynasty in northern India. |
Industrial | Low grade or very small diamonds which are used as abrasives or other industrial purposes. |
Information | Facts and data. It is important to distinguish information from propaganda, which is essentially skewed or distorted information. Most salespeople, for example, will offer information which is limited and selected to optimise their chance of selling to you. |
Integrity | Integrity is important in most business to business markets, and the commercial diamond market is said to operate with integrity. Some proponents of the Kimberley Process speak about the integrity of diamond itself, as though this had ever been questioned. What they presumably mean is that there is a perceived threat to the welfare of the diamond industry by peace activists. |
Internally Flawless, IF, I.F. | A clarity grade which allows for naturals or other surface features or imperfections. |
International Diamond Manufacturers' Association, IDMA, I.D.M.A. | The International Diamond Manufacturers' Association was formed at the end of World War II, and first met in Antwerp in 1946. |
In the Rough | "Diamond in the rough" is an expression meaning somebody or something having exceptionally good qualities or the potential for greatness but lacking polish and refinement. |
Investment | Although a diamond purchase may prove to become a good investment. Our advice is to buy diamonds for the pleasure they invoke by their ownership and use. Because diamonds are not a homogenous commodity, the secondary market in them is not particularly liquid, compared with that for any other commodity. |
Investment Trust | In 1952 De Beers formed the De Beers Investment Trust, to hold the significant portfolio of industrial, gold and related mineral, and agricultural interests that the company had built up to diversify its income streams. |
Iron | Iron is used as a solvent and catalyst in the production of synthetic diamonds. |
Irradiated | A diamond which has been subject to radiation, usually to improve its colour. Most processes are kept as commercial secrets, but no residual radiation is retained by the treated stone. |
Isomer | Diamond is one of the isomers of carbon. Isomers are molecules which have the same molecular formulae but different molecular structures. |
Isotropic | Being singly refractive, the opposite of doubly refractive (bi-refringent or anisotropic). Diamond is normally isotropic, but can be bi-refringent because of inclusions or internal strain. |
Israel | Israel is a leading centre for diamond trading and cutting, probably originating in the portability of diamonds, and the fact that many Jewish populations have faced upheavals and displacement. Jews form a major part of the world diamond trading and cutting industry. |
Jade | A description of the colour of certain green diamonds. |
Japan | Diamond engagement rings were unknown in Japan as late as the 1960's. De Beers has successfully targeted this market starting in 1967, and almost all Japanese brides now receive, or expect to receive, a diamond engagement ring. |
Jeffries, David | A 1750's pioneer in the study and practice of diamond cutting. |
Jewel, Jewelry, Jewellery | Diamonds are not necessarily jewellery, and vice versa, but diamond jewellery accounts for the bulk of diamond demand and sales by value, and is an important section of the jewellery market. |
Jeweller | One who works with jewellery. Many retail jewellers are merely shopkeepers. |
Jubilee | A shape of diamond cut with 8- facets. A large (245 carats) and famous diamond, originally called the Reitz diamond. Renamed when it was recut in 1897 during Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee year. |
Kalahari Bushmen | There has been much publicity about the Kalahari Bushmen who are being forced from their ancestral homelands by the Botswana government following diamond discoveries. |
Karat, Karats, Karat Weight | Karat is the American spelling of carat, although it appears to be used more in respect of gold alloys, whereas the English spelling carat is often used relating to the weight of diamonds or other gemstones. |
KBC Group | KBC Group was created in 2005 as a result of the merger of the KBC Bank and Insurance Holding Company and its parent company, Almanij. It is the largest bank in Belgium, and owns Antwerp Diamond Bank. |
Keel | A linear facet edge, or possibly small facet, on the bottom of step cut or rectangular diamonds, as opposed to a culet. |
Kiduah Meyuhad, KM, K.M. | Kiduah meyuhad is hebrew for "special drill". It refers to a process for internal laser drilling of diamonds first developed in 2000. |
Kimberley | Location of the "Big Hole", originally an area containing many small diamond claims, later bought up by De Beers. The Kimberley Mine. The South African City which grew up around the mine. |
Kimberley Octahedron | The Kimberley Octahedron is the largest diamond in the world at about 616 carats. |
Kimberley Process | An international agreement on methods to counter conflict diamonds, possibly another tool for De Beers to restrict competition. |
Kimberlite | The yellow or blue "ground" rock which forms diamond "pipes", and in which most diamond is found. |
Kings | Diamonds could only be worn by kings in many cultures until about the 15th century. |
Knot | The use of the term knot or naat parallels the same word applied to wood. It is a part of a diamond which is difficult to cut or polish because of twinning, negative crystal growth, or similar feature. |
Kohinoor, Koh-i-noor, Koh-i-nur, | The Kohinoor (mountain of light) was given to Queen Victoria in 1851, and is now part of the Crown Jewels. It weights 108 carats. |
La Luna | Believed to be about 200 carats, the La Luna diamond is a D colour Heart shaped stone. |
Large, Largest | The largest diamond known is a star 'Lucy' discovered in February 2004 by Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Largest on earth are listed on Large & Famous Diamonds. |
Laser, Lasered, Lasering | Diamonds with a dark inclusion caused by iron oxide or other salts in internal cavities can be laser drilled, then the offending material leached out using acid. An acceptable method of clarity enhancement, providing the drill hole is not re-filled with glass to disguise it. Should be disclosed to purchasers. Diamonds can also have inscriptions etched by laser, usually onto their girdle. |
Lazare Kaplan | A major (U.S.) diamond sightholder, cutter, and wholesaler of diamonds. Caused a considerable stir when it announced in March 1999 that it was to market HPHT enhanced diamonds which were almost indistinguishable from natural ones, through their Pegasus Overseas Limited subsidiary. |
Leo | The Leo cut is another of the proprietary hybrid cuts, made by Leo Schachter. In the UK, Leo appear to have an exclusive distribution agreement with Ernest Jones. |
Leveridge Gauge | A proprietary brand of micrometer gauge for measuring diamonds. |
Liberia | There is still a United Nations ban on export of diamonds from Liberia, due to civil war. Conflict diamonds are probably smuggled out. |
Light | Because of its high dispersion and refractive index, diamond handles light in a characteristic way. |
Light Brown | Light brown diamonds, not intense enough to be considered as fancy brown, often appear quite white. |
Light Cape | A diamond colour grade between "silver cape" and "cape", now becoming obsolescent because of the GIA system of grading by letters. |
Light Yellow | A grade of fancy yellow diamond. |
Light, Standard | For viewing and appraising diamonds, a standardised light source is desirable. There are lamps which are sold as diamond lights, and at least one specification a standardised light source, and colour temperature. |
London | Home to one of De Beers main offices, also to Hatton Garden. Previously a fairly important diamond cutting centre. |
Loose | Unmounted diamond. |
Lonsdaleite | A rare form of diamond with a hexagonal atomic structure discovered in meteoritic diamonds from Canyon Diablo Arizona, named after the British mineralogist Dame Kathleen Lonsdale, who helped advance the study of natural diamond crystals. |
Loudspeakers | Accuton make audio loudspeaker membranes of diamond because it is the best material for the job. |
Louis IX, King of France | Thirteenth century king of France who passed a law restricting ownership of diamonds for the king. |
Loupe | French word for magnifying glass, universally applied to the version used by most jewellery professionals, with a 10X magnification, although other powers are used. Diamond loupes are normally high quality, colour corrected (achromatic). |
Loupe Clean | Indicating that a diamond contains no visible inclusions when using the industry standard magnification of ten times (10x). |
Lower Girdle Facet | A diamond facet adjacent to and below the girdle (on the pavilion). |
Lucy | The largest known diamond is now 'Lucy in the Sky' |
Luminescence | Some diamonds luminesce (emit light) when exposed to sunlight or other ultraviolet-light sources. The light the diamonds emit is usually light blue, but yellow, orange, and red luminescence occurs in some stones. |
Lustre, Luster | The lustre of a diamond is its highly reflective surface sheen due to its high refractive index combined with the highly polished surfaces. |
Macle, Macles | A twinned rough diamond crystal, often triangular and flattish. Also spelt maccle, maccles. |
Made | A 'made' stone is one of excellent proportion and finish. |
Magnetic, Magnetism | Diamonds are not usually magnetic, although iron and other inclusions can rarely cause a diamond to be magnetic. Synthetic diamonds can be magnetic because of inclusions of iron from the solution from which they were formed. Magnetic nano-diamonds have also been created. |
Main Facets | The first sixteen facets to be ground onto rough diamonds, apart from the table and culet, also the main pavilion facets (the first eight on the pavilion). |
Marcasite | Iron pyrites (iron sulphide) is often facetted and used as a cheap, but not very effective imitation for diamonds. |
Marigold Cut | One of a number of "flower cuts" developed by Gaby Tolkowsky in about 1997 for De Beers. |
Marquis | A very common mis-spelling of marquise. |
Marquise | Also known as navette or boat shaped, but thousands of illiterate jewellers wrongly spell marquise as marquis! |
Mauve | A colour description used for certain pinkish purple diamonds. |
Master, Master Stone | Master stones are carefully selected diamonds used by diamond grading laboratories for colour comparison, they are also distributed for use by others who need to grade diamonds accurately. They are usually selected to lie as close as possible to each colour boundary. |
Mazel & Broche | Luck and blessing. A traditional Jewish expression used at the conclusion of an agreement to buy and sell diamonds, usually accompanied by a handshake. The seller wishes the buyer good luck, probably because he wants to do repeat business with the buyer, but possibly also because he expects to get paid promptly. |
Melée, Mêlée | Slightly woolly term for small diamonds, some consider 8 to 14 points as melée, other anything below 20 points. When sorting rough diamonds for size, it may refer to anything under about a carat. |
Millegrain, Milgrain | Literally a thousand grains, setting style where a large number of small grains of metal are raised up to create the diamond setting, a form of rim or bezel setting. |
Millennium Star | A large famous diamond, made even more famous by the audacious attempt to steal it and other diamonds from the Millennium dome exhibition. |
Milky | Some over-fluorescent diamonds have a cloudy or milky appearance, especially in ultra-violet light or daylight. |
Mine | A place where diamonds are extracted from the ground, by either open cast or deep pit mining. |
Mined | An expression which has started to appear as a description for natural diamonds as opposed to created or synthetic (real) ones. We have also seen it used misleadingly in comparison with simulants. |
Mines | Places where diamonds are extracted from the ground. |
Mining | The extraction of diamonds from in-ground deposits, as compared with dredging or other recovery methods. |
Mineral | A naturally occurring, homogeneous inorganic solid substance having a definite chemical composition and characteristic crystalline structure, color, and hardness, an ore. |
Model, Models, Modelling | When mass or batch production of a piece of jewellery is required, a model-maker will create a master model from which a rubber mould is made for subsequent lost wax casting of the piece in volume. Fashion models are used for photographic shoots for advertising and media promotion of diamonds. |
Modern Brilliant Cut | A diamond normally with 58 facets including the culet, polished using relatively modern theory, but not necessarily ideal or near ideal proportions, usually round unless otherwise stated. |
Modified Brilliant Cut | A diamond cut in a shape or style other than round, such as oval, pear, marquise, heart, princess, radiant, or trilliant. Could also be applied to round stones based on the brilliant cut. |
Moh, Mohs | German scientist and geologist who studied minerals and classified them by physical characteristics. He devised a hardness scale, Mohs Scale, which is named after him. |
Mohs Scale, Moh's Scale, Mohs' Scale | Simple comparative hardness scale devised by Friedrich Mohs about 1800, and still in use. |
Moissan, Henri | French scientist born 1852, discovered carborundum, was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1906 for his work on fluorine, and his development of the electric furnace. In 1892, Moissan theorized that diamonds could be synthesized by crystallizing carbon under pressure from molten iron. |
Moissanite | Transparent silicon carbide marketed as a diamond simulant. Named after Henri Moissan. |
Molecule | Diamonds are composed of large molecules of carbon atoms with strong bonds in all planes. |
Monnickendam | The only remaining major British diamond cutter. |
Moonstone | Not only the name of a gemstone, but also the name of a fictional famous diamond in a classic genre-setting detective mystery story by author Wilkie Collins. |
Morse, Henry | Henry Dutton Morse, 1826 to 1888, was an early American diamond-cutter, who invented diamond cutting machinery, and produced high quality stones through good proportion many years before Tolkowsky. |
Mount | A piece of jewellery into which a diamond is set. |
Mounter | Person who makes the piece of jewellery into which gemstones will be set by a setter. |
Mounting | The process of making a ring or other piece of jewellery into which gemstones will be set. Also an American word for a mount. |
Moussaieff | A London jeweller, heading by Shlomo Moussaieff, from Bukhara in Uzbekistan. It has a number of high profile Arab customers, and is notable for having owned a number of record breaking large or famous diamonds, including the Moussaieff Red, and now the Moussaieff Blue. |
Muddy | A descriptive term used by some mines or producers in preliminary sorting of rough diamonds. |
Mugabe, Robert | Believed to be a major force in smuggled Sierra Leone conflict or blood diamonds, and their laundering. |
Naat, Naats | Dutch or Afrikaner word for knot, usually caused by twinning or change in crystal growth direction. difficult to cut and polish because of grain direction changes. |
Naif, Naife, Naives | Said of a gemstone having a true or natural luster when uncut; e.g., of the natural, unpolished faces of a diamond crystal. Usually referring to a "natural" on a girdle. |
Nailhead, Nail Head | A diamond with a dark-looking table, usually due to the pavilion angle being too high, partially by the viewer blocking light when viewed in sub-optimal lighting. |
Namibia | Diamonds discovered in 1908. The fifth largest source of diamonds, mainly alluvial, recovered from coastal areas. |
Nanotechnology | Carbon including its diamond isomer is an important material in nanotechology because of its many unusual and extreme properties. |
Natural, Naturals | A natural diamond is one which was formed in the earth rather than synthetically. A natural is a surface mark or feature on a polished diamond which was present on the rough, and has not been polished away, often on the girdle, and may appear as a small matt, rough or glassy area. |
Needle | A thin, sharp looking inclusion in a diamond. |
Nexus | Diamond Nexus Labs of Franklin, Wisconsin misleadingly describe diamond simulants on their website as synthetic diamonds, and make numerous other dodgy claims. |
Nick | A notch made on a rough diamond where it needs to be cleaved. A notch on a polished diamond, usually near the girdle. |
Nickel | Used as a solvent and catalyst in production of synthetic diamonds. |
Nitrogen | Present in small quantities in type 1 diamonds, the cause of yellow colouration. |
North Light | Diamonds have traditionally been sorted in north light, often before midday, as this is considered to be a consistent colour, although special standardised diamond sorting lighting is now available and in common use. |
Nova Diamond | In 1999, NovaDiamond of Utah announced its HPHT process to turn type 1 brown diamonds to yellow or vivid yellow-green. |
Octagon, Octagonal | See 'Emerald Cut', and 'Radiant Cut'. |
Octahedron | A solid figure having eight sides or faces. A rough diamond with this approximate shape. The commonest crystal formation of diamond. |
Off Made, Off Make | Any diamond which does not reach good standards of cutting, particularly poor symmetry. |
Old Cut | Any cut, usually round, predating the modern brilliant cut in style. |
Old Miner | The old mine cut diamond is the earliest form of the modern brilliant cut. Also called the "cushion cut", it has a cushioned shaped girdle. This cut of diamond is characterized by a high crown, small table, deep pavilion and large culet. Other names for this cut are: old miner, Peruzzi cut, and triple cut brilliant. |
One Carat | A weight of one fifth of a gram. Any diamond of this weight. |
Open Culet | Culet which has been polished into a facet rather than being left as a point. |
Oppenheimer | Sir Ernest Oppenheimer formed Consolidated Diamond Mines about 1920, and merged them with De Beers. His son, Sir Harry Oppenheimer was later Chairman of De Beers. |
Oppenheimer Diamond Research Laboratory | Opened at Springs, on the East Rand, in 2001, together with the adjacent diamond-manufacturing plant, in the process of expanding, the largest and most advanced synthetic diamond centre in the world. |
Optic Axis | Although not relevant in diamonds, optic axis is important when distinguishing simulants. |
Orange | A rare fancy colour of diamond. |
Orlov | A large and famous diamond, which is 189.6 carats, near colourless, and rose cut. |
Orlov or Orloff Black | The Black Orlov (or Orloff) is a large famous diamond. Although not the largest black diamond, it is probably the most famous because of a supposed curse. It was originally called the Eye of Brahma, but was recut into three smaller stones. |
Oval | A fancy shape of diamond, usually a modified brilliant cut. |
P1, P2, P3, Piqué, First, Second, Third | Clarity grades of diamond in descending order, The American equivalents are I1, I2, I3. In a piquéd stone, the inclusion or inclusions would be visible to the naked eye. |
Palladium | Important jewellery metal, used in high quality alloys of platinum and white gold. |
Panther, Pink | The Pink Panther was the name of a fabulously valuable diamond which the jewel thief of the same name was trying to steal in the film "The Pink Panther starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau. |
Parcel, Parcels | Paper envelopes for diamonds, and also, importantly, the diamonds they contain. Many diamonds are traded by the parcel, rather than the buyer being permitted to pick the best. |
Parcel Price | A per carat price for buying an entire diamond parcel without selection. Sometimes a buyer is permitted to reject a small number of stones. |
Paste | Glass used as imitation diamond. Also diamond grit or powder supplied or used in paste form as an abrasive for cutting and polishing any material including other diamonds. The paste may be made with oil or any other binder to facilitate application and adhesion to lapping wheels etc. |
Pavé | From French, literally paved. Diamonds are other gemstones set in such a way that they substantially cover a surface of a piece of jewellery. |
Pavilion | The lower part of a diamond, below the girdle. |
Pavilion Angle | The angle between the main pavilion facets and the girdle. In diamond cutting and proportion, this is the single most important dimension, and should be around 40.75° to 41°. |
Pavilion Facet | Any of the facets on the pavilion of a diamond, but usually referring to the main pavilion facets, as distinct from the lower girdle facets. |
Peg | Brummy (Birmingham) word for claw as in gem setting. |
Pegasus Overseas | Pegasus Overseas Limited, as subsidiary of General Electric market HPHT colour improved diamonds which they claimed were almost undetectable, causing a near panic in diamond markets when announced in March 1999. |
Pendant, Pendants | A piece of jewellery designed to dangle or hang. Often diamond set. |
Percentage | There are various ratios usually expressed as percentages which give indications of the accuracy of a diamond's proportions. Also a dealer's mark up. |
Perfect, Perfection | Only D colour and flawless diamonds should be described as perfect. It is our view that perfection is illusory or elusive, as "perfect" diamonds viewed under 20 times magnification instead of 10 times, would probably reveal tiny features or imperfections. |
Phonon, Phonons | The quantum of acoustic or vibrational energy, considered a discrete particle and used especially in mathematical models to calculate thermal and vibrational properties of solids. |
Phosphorescence | Some diamonds and other gemstones and minerals continue to glow or emit visible light for a period of time after exposure to visible, ultra-violet or other light, after the light source has been removed. |
Photoluminescence | The emission of visible light by a diamond due to the incidence of light of a different wavelength, including fluorescence and phosphorescence. |
Pick | A "pick" is when a buyer is permitted by the seller to select one or more diamonds from a parcel. |
Picking Price | Normally a higher price is charged to a buyer wishing to take one or more selected stones from a parcel, this is known as a picking price. |
Pink | One of the rarest and most desirable colours for diamond. |
Pink Panther | The Pink Panther was the name of a fabulously valuable diamond which the jewel thief of the same name was trying to steal in the film "The Pink Panther starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau. |
Pinpoint, Pinpoints | Tiny inclusions, of pinpoint size, sometimes numerous. |
Pipe, Pipes | A diamondiferous area composed of kimberlite, sometimes raised above softer surrounding rock, originally of volcanic origin as a lava flow. |
Piqué | From French "prick", a needle or other inclusion in a diamond. First piqué (P1) is a clarity grade, the American equivalent is I1. |
Pit | Diamond mine. Surface mark on diamond. |
Presence | The presence or absence of colour, inclusions and other features considered when appraising and grading diamonds. |
Platen, Baltzar von | Swedish scientist who was the first to synthesize diamond in 1953 while working for ASEA. |
Platinum | Silvery gray precious metal often used for setting or mounting high quality diamonds as jewellery. |
Pochette | A sealed plastic packet containing a diamond or diamond. |
Point | A weight of one hundredth of a carat, written as 0.01 cts. The name of an old basic cut. Any sharp meeting place of three or more facets, such as a corner, or a closed culet; forms a weak point in polished diamonds, as a sharp blow to a point could easily cause the diamond to cleave (break). |
Polish, Polished, Polishing | In diamond manufacturing, polishing can refer to the grinding of facets onto a partially made rough diamond, but more particularly the later stages of brillianteering. |
Polished Girdle | A girdle which had been finely ground to a polished finish instead of the older and simpler matt finish left by bruting. |
Polish Lines | Faint surface lines visible either as a result of imperfect polishing, or of grain lines in the diamond. |
Polish Mark | A "burn mark", and area of slight cloudiness on the surface of a diamond caused by allowing it to become too hot when grinding or polishing it. |
Portuguese Blue | A large and famous diamond owned by the Smithsonian Institution, which is neither Portuguese nor blue. |
Powder | Usually referring to diamond powder used for polishing diamonds or other materials. |
Precious | Having high or relatively high value, usually applied to gemstones, particularly the "big four", diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and sapphires, but also includes black opal. |
Price, Prices, Pricing | Diamond pricing is extremely variable. Comparison pricing requires consideration of all aspects of quality. |
Princess | A square or near square (oblong) diamond, which has been facetted in a brilliant cut style rather than a step cut. |
Production | Current world production of gem diamonds is about 30 million carats (6,000 kg) of cut and polished stones annually, and over 100 million carats (20,000 kg) of diamonds are sold for industrial use each year. In 2003, this constituted total production of nearly US$9 billion in value. |
Prong | American word for claw, as in gem setting. |
Proportion | The consideration of the overall shape of a diamond taking each part in relation to all other parts. An important quality element for diamonds. |
Proportionscope | A proprietary piece of equipment for assessing, demonstrating, and measuring the proportions of diamonds, and comparing them with ideal. |
Purity | Another word for clarity. |
Purple | A very rare and attractive fancy diamond colour. |
Quality | As De Beers adverts state, it is as important in a diamond as anything else you own. |
Quarter | The Jewellery Quarter in Hockley Birmingham (UK not Alabama), is renowned as one of the two main jewellery manufacturing centres in Britain. |
Quartz | Sometimes used a an imitation or simulant for diamond, particularly the transparent colourless form known as rock crystal. |
Quintus Project | The name of the ASEA project run by Baltzar von Platen to synthesize diamond. Von Platen's lab became known as the Quintuslaboratorium. |
Radiant Cut | Radiant cuts combine the best of brilliant cuts, with a square emerald cut outline. |
Rap, Rapaport | Martin Rapaport produces the Rapaport Diamond Report, a monthly magazine, and the world's leading trade diamond price list, diamond & jewellery news and information source. |
Ratner, Ratner's | Trade mark owned by Signet Group PLC, owners of H. Samuel, Ernest Jones, and others. |
Ray | A thin line or narrow beam of light. |
Red | One of the rarest, and most desirable colours for diamond. |
Red Cross | A famous diamond, strangely enough it is yellow. |
Reflection | Important optical effect, whereby light bounces off a surface. |
Refraction | Important optical effect, the deviation of light when it passes from one medium to another, e.g. air to diamond. See Refractive Index. |
Refractive Index, RI, R.I. | A measure of the amount by which light will be refracted by a particular by a particular medium. |
Rhodium, Rhodium Plating | Rhodium is a highly reflective silvery precious metal, one of the platinum group of metals, often used to plate over "white" gold alloys to enhance their whiteness, in and around diamond settings. Not usually needed on platinum. |
Rise and Fall of Diamonds | Book by Edward Jay Epstein. |
River | Obsolescent colour grading term from the SCAN DN (Scandinavian) system, equivalent to D and E colours in the GIA scale. |
Rough | Rough is the word used to describe all uncut or unpolished diamonds. |
RTZ, R.T.Z., Rio Tinto Zinc | The third largest diamond prospecting company. Owns the Argyle mine in Western Australia, Diavik in Canada, & Murowa project in Zimbabwe. |
Russia | Russia overtook Botswana as the largest exporter of diamonds by volume in 2003. It's diamond production and trade figures were secret until recently. |
Ryan Thompson | Editor of the "Famous Diamonds" website (on tripod), still the best website about its subject, large and famous diamonds. Much copied by many commercial jewellers and would-be experts. |
Sand | A term used in sorting rough diamonds for size. It usually refers to stones under about 0.10 carats (10 points). |
Scaife | A steel wheel which is diamond impregnated, for polishing diamonds. Pronounced skife, we have also seen the spelling skyf. |
Science | To a scientist diamond is interesting for its range of exceptional and extreme properties. When compared to almost any other material, diamond almost always comes out on top. As well as being the hardest known material, it is also the least compressible, the stiffest material, the best thermal conductor with an extremely low thermal expansion, chemically inert to most acids and alkalis, transparent from the deep UV through the visible to the far infrared, and is one of the few materials known with a negative electron affinity. |
Sea | A colour description used for certain fancy bluish green diamonds, also "Eau de Mer". |
Semi Precious, Semi-Precious | An expression traditionally used to describe gemstones other than the "big four" of diamond, ruby, sapphire, and emerald, so would include opal, pearl, amethyst an more. CIBJO and others have advised that its use be discontinued, and all gemstones be termed "precious", a recommendation which has been almost universally ignored. |
Set | The process of securing a diamond or other gem into a piece of jewellery is known as setting it. |
Setter | Person who puts diamonds or other gems into jewellery mounts. |
Setting | The process of fixing a gemstone into a mount to create a piece of jewellery. A setting is a word used by consumers to describe what a jeweller would call a mount. The word setting is sometimes used in referring to a collet. |
Shape | A word often used interchangeably with "cut", although the two have different meanings. Shape should refer to the basic outline type, such as round, oval, square, princess, radiant, cushion, oblong, emerald, baguette, pear. |
Shapes | A term used when sorting rough diamonds. "Shapes" are unbroken crystals, but of less regularity than "stones". |
Siberia | Siberia has been a major source of diamonds for a long time, with new investments in existing mines set to increase production soon. |
Sierra Leone | Diamonds are the most important export from Sierra Leone, although the country is still unstable following a long period of civil war. |
Sieve | A device for sorting rough or polished diamonds by size. Diamond sieve sets have interchangeable sieve plates each drilled with a number of holes. |
Sight, Sights | Each of the week long meetings which De Beers hold ten times each year for rough diamond buyers who attend by invitation. |
Sightholder, Sight-holder | An individual or company which attends De Beers diamond selling meetings, known as sights. |
Signet | A ring designed to carry a personal seal, often set with a diamond. Signet Group PLC is the name of Ratners PLC which owns H. Samuel and Ernest Jones in the UK. |
Silver | White highly reflective metallic element, used in Victorian times for diamond setting, before the development of white gold alloys, and before platinum could be isolated. |
Silver Cape | An obsolescent colour grading term denoting diamonds whiter, or less yellow than light cape. |
Silver Wedding | Although silver is a traditional gift on the 25th wedding anniversary, a diamond eternity or other ring is often acquired. |
Simulate, Simulated, Simulant | A simulant is anything, natural gemstone or synthetic, which imitates a diamond. Synthetic diamonds however are real diamonds, not simulants. |
Single Cut | Confusingly, another name for eight cut diamonds, with 18 facets. |
Single Refraction | Diamond is normally singly refractive, many gemstones are doubly refractive (bi-refringent), and diamonds can also be doubly refractive because of internal strain or inclusions. |
Skin | Coating on the surface of many rough diamonds. |
Slight Inclusions, SI, SI1, SI2 | A clarity grade used by GIA and others, an SI stone should not have inclusions visible to the naked eye. |
SI3 | A clarity grade between SI2 and P1 (I1), not recognised as yet by the GIA, but in use by EGL and Rapaport, plus most of the wholesale diamond trade. |
Small | Slightly variable term used to describe size ranges of polished diamonds, usually meaning any weight under about 0.08 cts (8 points). |
Smalls | A term used when sorting rough diamonds by size. Usually refers to stones of about one carat or over, depending on the general quality of the source. |
Smuggle, Smuggler, Smuggling | Because of diamond's high value in relation to its size, diamonds are very easy to transport, either as personal wealth for evacuees, or for commercial smugglers. |
SOC, S.O.C. | Initials of De Beers "Supplier of Choice" policy (q.v.), actually a misnomer as it should really say "Customer of Choice". |
Solitaire | A ring or other piece of jewellery containing a single diamond, or sometimes a single major diamond with smaller diamonds as embellishments. |
Sort | To split rough or polished diamonds into grades depending on colour, clarity, size. Also to separate rough diamonds from their surrounding materials. |
South Africa | Still one of the world's major source of diamonds, although its share of production has declined. It is now about 5th largest producer by weight, and 4th by value. |
SouthernEra Diamonds Inc. | SouthernEra is engaged in diamond exploration in Canada, South Africa, Gabon, Australia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. It recovered its first Congolese diamonds in October 2005. |
Spam | Some unsolicited commercial e-mail (spam) allegedly involves diamonds. Typically the vendor has £20 million worth of stolen diamonds he will sell you for 20% of their value in exchange for your help. Ignore! |
Specifications | Following Tolkowsky, a number of individuals and organisations have published specifications for excellence in diamond cutting, particularly in relation to proportions and angles. |
Sperregebiet | Sperregebiet means "Forbidden Territory", and is a part of Southern Namibia. It got its name after diamonds were discovered in 1908, in what was then German South West Africa. |
Spinel | A natural gemstone which occurs in many colours. Synthetic white spinel was often used in the past as a diamond substitute. |
Spotted | A clarity grade below P3 (I3), now in danger of become obsolete, as P3 appears to have been extended to include lower grades. |
Spread | The diameter of a diamond or the normal weight equivalent assuming ideal proportions. Also used to describe a diamond which is cut too shallow, and therefore "spreads" more than it weighs. |
Star | A fancy shape of polished diamond. A facet name. Small polished diamonds, usually under about one point (0.01 cts) each. |
Star Facet | One of the eight facets adjacent to the table on a brilliant cut diamond, so called because they from an eight pointed star when viewed from above. |
Star of South Africa | The first large diamond found in South Africa, at 84 carats rough, and 48 polished, it sparked the diamond rush. Also known as the Dudley diamond. |
Stars | Small polished diamonds, usually under about one point (0.01 cts) each. |
Steinmetz | The Steinmetz Diamond Group is a major diamond cutting and trading company. |
Step Cut | A traditional method of facetting square, emerald and other shapes, the facets are in the form of sloping "steps", these cuts fail to capture most of the potential brilliance of diamonds, and will almost certainly be largely superseded by modified brilliant styles of cutting. |
Stone, Stones | A general word for any gemstone including diamond. Also a shape grade used when sorting rough diamonds. A "stone" is an unbroken crystal of regular formation. |
Strategic Stockpile | As with many essential commodities, the USA holds a strategic stockpile of diamonds. There is an interesting chapter in Epstein's book about supplies of diamonds during the second world war. |
Sunflower Cut | One of a number of "flower cuts" developed by Gaby Tolkowsky in about 1997 for De Beers. |
Supermaterial | There are many unusual, unique, or extreme properties of diamond which would qualify it as a supermaterial. |
Supplier of Choice | A controversial De Beers policy to restrict its supply to customers who will carry out its policies regarding advertising promotion and branding, furthering claims about it monopolization of the diamond industry. |
Surat | Major diamond polishing town in India. |
Surface | Whether a polished diamond has a good surface, free of blemishes, is a quality factor. |
Surface Graining | Usually parallel lines visible on the surface or facet edges of a diamond, similar to grain in wood. These grain lines reflect the structure of the diamond crystal, possibly an area of twinning, and may be due to imperfect polishing. |
Swaziland | This African country is a fairly important diamond source. |
Swiss Cut | Halfway between a brilliant and an eight cut, with 34 facets in total. |
Symmetrical, Symmetry | In most cuts of diamond, symmetry is important and desirable. |
Syndicate | One of the names by which De Beers, with its inter-related companies, is known. Many diamond syndicates have been formed at various periods of time, to purchase large important diamonds. |
Synthetic | Real diamonds which have been manufactured rather than mined. Do not confuse with imitations. |
Table Cut | A simple, obsolete cut with one "slice" cleaved or polished from (usually) an octahedral. forming a table as on a modern stone. |
Table Facet | The top and largest facet on most diamonds including brilliant cuts. |
Tacy | Tacy Ltd. Diamond Industry Consultants is a specialist strategic consultancy house and 'think-tank' exclusively serving the stakeholders in the international diamond industry. Publishers of Diamond Intelligence Briefs. |
Tang | A tool or arm for holding a diamond while it is being ground or polished against a scaife. |
Tension Setting | A method of setting diamonds and other gems using only the springiness of the mount to hold the stone firm. Can look quite spectacular but rather chunky and heavy; insecure otherwise. Best avoided in our opinion, or use small unobtrusive underbezel to achieve similar effect. |
Termite, Termites | Prospectors have used termites, or their mounds to help detect diamonds. Termites burrow down to retrieve water, and carry back with them indicator minerals. Termite or Adam Ant? |
Tetrahedron | Having four faces. Tetrahedral is one of the crystal forms of diamond. |
Thermoluminescence | The property of diamonds and other materials to emit light when heated. |
Thickness | Usually describing a girdle, and often expressed as a percentage of the height or depth of the diamond, often using relative terms such as "medium". |
Tiffany | The name of a famous diamond, also a famous jeweller. Commonly used, presumably in breach of trade mark, for a particular style of diamond claw (prong) setting. |
Tolkowsky | Usually referring to Marcel Tolkowsky who published his book "Diamond Design" in 1919, helping to revolutionise diamond cutting. Gaby (Gabi) Tolkowsky is also a famous diamond cutter. |
Tone | An aspect of colour, important in grading fancy coloured diamonds. |
Top | The part of the diamond above the pavilion, correctly called the "crown". Also a modifier used in descriptive colour grading systems, meaning better than or in the upper range of , e.g. top silver cape. |
Top Light Brown | A relatively lightly coloured brownish diamond, often bordering on white. |
Top Silver Cape | A diamond colour grade in obsolescent descriptive system, between commercial white and silver cape. |
Top Wesselton | A diamond colour grade in obsolescent mainly Scandinavian system, referring to a diamond of a colour at the top end of what could be expected from the Wesselton Mine. |
Total Crap | Famous words of Gerald Ratner, for which he will never be forgotten. |
Total Internal Reflection | An optical effect when light travelling in a higher refractive index material hits a boundary with a lower refractive index, and is reflected totally. Important when calculating diamond cutting angles. |
Trading Company | Usually referring to the "Diamond Trading Company", or DTC, part of De Beers. |
Translate, Translation | Translation of the word diamond into a number of other languages. |
Transparent, Transparency | Ideally, a diamond should be completely transparent, any opacity is undesirable. |
Trap Cut | Also known as step cut. A traditional way to cut rectangular, octagonal or other non-round diamonds, including emerald cuts. Looses brilliance compared with more modern brilliant cut styles. |
Treated, Treatment | Ignoring the fact that cutting and polishing of rough diamonds is a form of treatment, this usually refers to diamonds which have been processed in some way to enhance their colour or clarity. |
Triangle, Triangular, Trilliant, Trillion | A diamond which is three sided viewed from above. May be step cut or modified brilliant cut. |
Trigon, Trigons | Triangular marks, usually small, and quite common on surfaces of rough and polished diamonds, due to twinning and other crystal growth factors. |
Twin, Twinned, Twinning | Twinning occurs when two or more crystals have formed together, where a single crystal has had a change in its crystal growth directions, or when negative crystal growth has taken place. |
Type, Types | There are two main "types" of diamond, type 1 containing nitrogen, and type 2 without significant nitrogen. Each type has two sub-types, A and B. |
UK, U.K., United Kingdom | Home of Hatton Garden, London, and of one of De Beers main offices. |
Ultraviolet, UV, U.V. | High frequency, short wavelength electromagnetic radiation, between visible light and X-rays. |
Uncut | Uncut diamonds are usually referred to as "rough". It applies to all unpolished diamonds. |
Unpolished | Unpolished diamonds are usually referred to as "rough". It applies to all uncut diamonds. |
Unmounted | A diamond which is loose, not set in a piece of jewellery. |
Upper Girdle Facet | Any of the sixteen facets on the crown (top), adjoining the girdle of a diamond. |
USA, U.S.A. | The largest consumer market for diamonds. |
Vivid | Used on colour grading of fancy coloured diamonds to denote the most intensely coloured stones, not the darkest. |
Vrijediamanthandel | An Antwerp club and meeting place for dealers in polished and rough diamonds. |
VS, V.S., Very Slight Inclusions, VS1, VS2 | Clarity grade for diamonds, between VVS and SI. |
VVS, V.V.S., Very Very Slight Inclusions, VVS1, VVS2 | Clarity grade for diamonds, just below Internally Flawless (I.F.) |
Water | An archaic term used to describe the quality of diamonds, as in the phrase "of the first (or finest) water", probably alluding to a combination of good colour and clarity. |
Water Clear | A term sometimes used as a broad quality band in grading rough diamonds. |
Wedding | The diamond wedding anniversary is often stated as the seventy fifth (75th), but a diamond jubilee is generally recognised as the sixtieth (60th) anniversary. |
Wedding Ring, Wedding Rings | Wedding rings are often set with one or more diamonds, usually small. |
Weight, Weights | The weigh of any diamond is normally expressed in carats. |
Wesselton | South African diamond mine, also near obsolete name of a diamond colour. |
West 47th Street | West 47th Street is the central location of the diamond industry in New York and the USA. |
Wettability | Diamond is highly resistant to wetting by water. We will attempt to add a scientific explanation of this phenomenon at a later date. |
WFDB, W.F.D.B., World Federation of Diamond Bourses | See our Bourse page. |
White | When we rather lazily refer to diamonds as white, we actually mean colourless. |
White Diamond | The name of Werner Herzog's film about British engineer Graham Dorrington's air-ship expedition over Guyana. |
White Diamonds | White Diamonds is the name of a fragrance marketed under Elizabeth Taylor's name. |
White Light | Light containing a balanced full spectrum of colours, so that it appears colourless. |
Window | A small facet polished on a rough diamond, through its skin, to allow a diamanteer to observe and map any internal features of the diamond prior to cutting. Also an area of a gemstone which "leaks" light or colour usually due to poor, often shallow, cutting. |
Winston, Harry | Jeweller with a store on Rodeo Drive, Beverley Hills, who is known as the "Jeweler to the Stars". |
Wisp | An inclusion or clarity feature due to twinning, an irregularity in the crystal growth. |
WDC, W.D.C., World Diamond Council | Formed in July 2000 by the World Federation of Diamond Bourses and the International Diamond Manufacturers Association at their Antwerp meeting. |
Xenon | Xenon, a rare inert gas has been found in nano-diamonds recovered from meteorites. Although some diamonds may be formed as a result of the collision between meteorites and the earth, others contain xenon isotopes which are not know on earth, and presumably were formed in deep space. |
X-Ray, Xray, Xrays, X-Rays | Used to sort rough diamonds because most diamonds fluoresce when exposed to X-rays. |
YAG, Y.A.G. | Y.A.G. stands for Yttrium Aluminium Garnet, used as a somewhat unconvincing diamond simulant before cubic zirconia. |
Yellow | Most diamonds contain nitrogen which gives them a slight yellow tinge. More intense yellow diamonds are considered as fancy coloured, making them rare and valuable. |
Yellow Ground | Weathered kimberlite rock, normally diamondiferous, and named after Kimberley in South Africa. |
Zaire | The name of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 1965 to 1997. Produces a large proportion of the world production of industrial diamonds. |
Zinnia Cut | One of a number of "flower cuts" developed by Gaby Tolkowsky in about 1997 for De Beers. |
Zircon | Rare, natural blue gemstone. Do not confuse it with Cubic Zirconia. |
Zirconia | Usually referring to Cubic Zirconia. |
ZrO2 | Zirconium Oxide, or more accurately Zirconium Dioxide, also called zirconia, when crystallised in cubic system, it is known as Cubic Zirconia, the most successful imitation diamond. |