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Ch. 6: Inherent Diamond Qualities & Cutting

Ch. 6: Inherent Diamond Qualities & Cutting Page of 448 Ch. 6: Inherent Diamond Qualities & Cutting Text size:minusplusRestore normal size  Mail page Print this page
130
THE DIAMOND
bellied. The shape of the facets also differs from those of the brilliant-cut and there are eighty of them. The table is replaced by a low pyramid of facets meeting at a point in the center. It has not proved popular.
A process of grooving diamonds has been patented. Parallel grooves around stones having 8, 10, 12, or 18 sides are sometimes cut and regular facets are cut con­cave. Diamonds cut thus have not yet appeared on the market.
In Amsterdam there are 64 factories with an aggre­gate of 7,000 mills and employing about 9,000 persons. Wages of setters, cutters, and polishers, range from about ten to fourteen dollars per week. Cleavers are paid from fourteen to twenty dollars per week. Ten hours is the working day. Antwerp employs from 4,000 to 5,000, of whom 70 are women. Sorters get six to ten dollars per week and the other workers are paid about the same as those of Amsterdam. In Paris there are a number of cutting shops, but very few of them are for cutting diamonds only. It is so also in London, therefore neither city is regarded as an important center of the cutting industry.
Cutting in the United States was first begun about 1866. Mr. Henry D. Morse of Boston, who soon had a good reputation for fine cutting, operated up to fifteen or twenty mills. A few later followed his lead, mostly as repairers only, however, but about 1881 the old New York diamond importing house, Randel & Baremore, afterwards Randel, Baremore & Billings, opened a cut­ting shop in connection with their importing business, under the management of John B. Humphrey, the dia­mond cutter of Boston. Later the shop was in the
Ch. 6: Inherent Diamond Qualities & Cutting Page of 448 Ch. 6: Inherent Diamond Qualities & Cutting
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