It's weird because every time I have lunch with this one friend, she takes my earrings out of my ear and looks at them through a magnifier. It's so strange! I think the only way people are going to "know" the diamonds aren't standard mine-sourced is if you get something that's bigger than what your friends probably think you could usually afford. So, like, if you are, say, a nonprofit writer and editor (just for a random example) and show up in diamond earrings that are like 2 carats each, people will probably think they are fake. If you get a size that seems appropriate to your station in life, no one will give it a second thought. But to the extent that YOU care about both the vibe of having a "natural" diamond and the ethics of not contributing to the environmental and humanitarian harm of diamond mining - just get something vintage. You can have them reset if you want to. |
Same here on the earrings! I got a lab made solitaire necklace and love it. |
I just have to say it- inclusions, PP, not occlusions. Two totally different words with two totally different meanings. And it’s VVS, not VSS. |
No. CZ has a different chemical structure from diamonds, the base is cubic instead of pyramidal. Therefore they are not as sparkly or strong, and become cloudy over time. Lab grown diamonds are actual diamonds. |
There are different levels of quality in man made diamonds too. |
| Any recommendations on where to get lab grown diamonds? |
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Lab diamonds are diamonds, the same as natural diamonds. Kind of like a $20 bill printed in Nashville is the same as a $20 bill printed in Portland - totally undistinguishable and interchangeable, except they came from different places. But you'd never know where a particular $20 bill came from bc they're all the same.
I have experience with both Lightbox and Vrai and I have to say I prefer the Vrai stones. Lightbox is cheaper though and also a spectacular product so no real knock on them either. |
No, you’re completely wrong. IGO grades lab clarity like any other diamond. And the quality varies just like mined. |
This is a myth. Gem quality diamonds are, in fact, rare. As was proven when the De Beers monopoly fell. |
*IGI |
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Get the lab ones and I hope they shine enough to take the attention away from your face.
Tattoos, jewelry,any bling0bling, luxury cars, accessories - all so 90s. |
| I'm think the same thing, any suggestions on where to buy? |
True, but overall, they are right. They are diamonds. A trained eye with a loupe can tell lab grown versus a natural stone. It’s all about the cut. I don’t think anybody will be taking such a close look at your stone, that they can tell it is lab versus mined. It’s the same with lab grown sapphires, rubies and emeralds. They are the same gem just not mined and without inclusions and veining. Some people want that and some people don’t care. |
| I have been contemplating lab grown studs for a few years. I say a thing on TV basically saying they were worth $50, but he was a natural diamond promoter. I kept thinking prices might drop, but they haven't |
Omg NO. You’re right that they’re distinguishable under a loop but it has nothing to do with the cut. The inclusions in lab diamonds have characteristics that are distinguishable from natural. This is completely different than corundum stones (sapphires and rubies) where the lab versions do not have any kind of inclusions. |