Ch. 7: Diamond Colors & Flaws

Ch. 7: Diamond Colors & Flaws Page of 448 Ch. 7: Diamond Colors & Flaws Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
136                        THE DIAMOND
are the white stones of the high-class jewelers. Dia­monds of the color known to the general public as white, are called in the trade, " silver capes." They also are graded as " silver capes" and " top silver capes." " Capes," also subdivided in the same way, are tinted still deeper and are sold to the public often as " commercial white." " By-water " are quite yellow, though the color is not deep enough to place them among the fancies, and is sufficiently lost to the eye when mounted to warrant their retention in the list of white stones.
Browns are all included under the one classification. Those having an almost imperceptible shade of brown are separated and sold as steel-white, pink, etc. Fancy browns are not included in this grade.
The green-tinted diamonds, being little known by the public and many dealers, are used by manufacturers and sold when mounted, as white. As those who look for color have only yellow in mind, the greenish hue is sel­dom detected, especially as stones of this character rarely weigh much over 1/2 carat and are usually smaller. A few are of sufficiently deep color to be classed as fancies. They are a light apple-green similar to the Willemite.
In the list of fancies which have been found, are the following, given in the order of their rarity, the first being most rare. Emerald green, red, sapphire blue (invariably of poor color), pink (seldom more than a tint), black, orange, canary, coffee-brown, reddish-brown, golden-brown, and tints of violet and blue which are the more rare as they become deeper.
There is another class of stones the color of which varies materially according to the light in which they are viewed. These are classified as " false colors." As the
Ch. 7: Diamond Colors & Flaws Page of 448 Ch. 7: Diamond Colors & Flaws
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page