Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My fiancée told me that all she really cared about was having a ring that:
(1) was bigger than her moms ring and
(2) was shiny enough an big enough for her friends to notice/get jealous and
(3) was not so big that it looks fake.
Given that criteria I realized that the engagement ring was really about female on female competition and outwards displays so I really discounted the symbolism of the ring as a monetized expression of love and commitment. I decided I wasn't going into the trap of 3 months salary and spending the equivalent of a new car...
So I went and got a 1 carat round ideal shape D color IF diamond in a hearts and arrows cut in a lab grown diamond I told her and she didn't appear to care about the lab aspect and is happy with people noticing the ring. It looks like that is really all she cares about.... getting it noticed. A "natural" diamond would have cost a lot more... I really glad I went the cheap route.
So you overpaid for a CZ? Cool story
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100647697
1. That's better than overpaying for natural stone cause its just an overpriced rock.
2. You don't know the science because CZ is not a lab grown diamond. Lab grown diamond have the same chemical composition as a diamond and that isn't the case with CZ.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_vapor_deposition
3. Plasma chemical vapor deposition is just more cool than digging in the dirt.
4. Either way you just sound bitter.
t
You cited wiki? Ha ha ha
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100647697
"Diamonds are a natural mineral, created in the earth billions of years ago," she says. "Synthetics aren't the same thing, and to call them diamonds is misleading. Diamonds have captured peoples' hearts and imaginations for centuries and as such have always held their value, both financially and emotionally."
Veterans of the diamond industry are crystal clear on one further matter. Consumers of high-end diamond jewelry want the real deal and are willing to pay up.
"The majority of consumers have told us during extensive independent research that they want the real thing and aren't prepared to settle for anything less," De Beers' Gould said.
IDC's Almor is equally emphatic. "Synthetic diamonds take the emotion out of the equation and put the price point in the center and that's not always what the customer wants."
Shlomo Tidhar, CEO of Singapore Diamond Exchange has the last word.
"I believe that it will be very hard for me as a man to buy a woman I love a synthetic diamond," said Tidhar. "That's going to be difficult for me to do, I'm not sure if she will accept it and me myself would be reluctant to do it."