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Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Diamond Report—Technical or Descriptive?

Gabi Tolkowsky has a unique way of explaining diamond concepts. Good info.

Gabi S. Tolkowsky writes:

The End Consumer
What are the major elements which make people take the decision to acquire a diamond? Due to my numerous lectures given worldwide to consumers, and professionals alike, the ‘Live’ conversations with them, their immediate reactions, their questions, comments, requests and their continuous ‘come backs’, I will give such feedback to the audience.

Due to the internet and the multiple publications, our professional language spilled into common knowledge and is employed by the general public as such. Should our professional language adapt itself more towards descriptive senses such as "Rarity", "Beauty", "Dream", "Emotion", "Craftsmanship", "Art"?

I do not Cut a diamond. The word 'Cut' means in English: make an opening or a wound in something, with a sharp tool such as a knife or scissors: To divide and remove something from something large: To reduce something by removing material, etc.

As a professional diamond cutter I would say: "Divide" a diamond if necessary (cleaving, sawing, lasering). As a professional diamond bruter I would say: "Fashion" a shape, a form. As a professional diamond polisher I would say: "Fashion" a shape, a form, and will polish the surface by applying the "Style" of a "Design" with precise "Facets" or "Mirrors".

Should our terminology be "Technical" or should it become more "Descriptive"? Should we have an internal, detailed Technical Diamond Report (for professional use only) and a descriptive external Diamond Report (to the attention of the consumer)?

What is Gemology, and what is a Gemologist (Most of the popular dictionaries and encyclopedias do not refer to such entries)? What means the word - Modified or Variations? What are the meanings of finish, make, proportions, cut grading, finish grading, major symmetry, minor symmetry.

New designs of polished diamonds are subject to very high expenses for protection purposes. The gemological laboratories should be able to maintain a complete and confidential library of past and future "Shapes and Styles", and provide legal protection to creativity and invention as long as such are not yet reaching the open market. New designs as well as past historical designs are presenting parameters which are not yet considered being conventional (depth, table, crown, pavilion, cutlet, shape etc.). Should those be integrated into the general description "Fancies" or should the terminology "Fancy Shape" be described as being "Natural Shapes" (The craftsman protects symmetrically the natural outline of the individual natural rough diamond shape?).

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