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CUTTING DIAMONDS
dam and Antwerp, and later in New York City. At present the roughest and smaller ones are cut in the former place and the finest quality stones in New York City which is a big diamond cutting center.
It took two years of steady work to cut the Pitt diamond. But art is long, and diamond-cutters are patient. Some­times two rough diamonds are made to cut each other; as fast as one facet is completed the solder is melted out of the stick, and the diamond replaced by a different position.
Some stones are naturally more brilliant than others, but many diamonds would be more brilliant if cut better. As very many crystals are quite irregular in shape, absolutely correct cutting would often entail too much cost. Very many more persons recognize the beauty of a perfectly cut stone when they see it, than the number of those who are willing to pay the extra cost in time and material necessary to secure it. For that reason, though the average cutting today is very good, and conforms generally to the propor­tions of excellence, a large number are not mathematically exact, and when they are so the price appears to many un­reasonably high.
Cutting is the most important stage in the diamond career. In diamond cutting the apparatus is simple but its manipulation requires both skill and experience. The American invention of the diamond saw enables one work­man to do the work of twenty or more and turn out a more perfect product. This marvelous little tool measures but one-thousandth of an inch in thickness and is turned at a speed of 2,000 to 3,000 revolutions per minute. Even with
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