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The Carat Weight of a Diamond
Choosing a diamond can be more complex than what people might think. The 4 C's of a diamond; cut, color, clarity, and carat are the most important factors when choosing a diamond. The three of the 4 C's are crucial to a quality diamond, whereas the 4th will be explained further in this actual. The cut of a diamond pertains to the specific shape that a diamond is cut into. Diamond cuts can be found in such shapes as Round, Princess, Oval, Pear, Marquise, Emerald, Asscher, Heart, and cushion cuts. The second of the four c's, color, is the actual color of the stone. Some people commonly mix up the color of the stone thinking that the color pertains to fancy colored diamonds, but the color of a diamond is actually the color of the stone. A diamonds color is graded on a scale of D to Z. The color grading d means the diamond is colorless and will be priced high. The color grading Z means the diamond has a slight yellow or brownish color and will be priced low. The clarity of a diamond refers to if the diamond has any inclusions or blemishes. An inclusion in a diamond is a natural occurrence where a fossil or leaf gets imbedded deep in the stone during the stones creation whereas a blemish is a scratch on the surface.The last of the 4 C's; carat is one of the most misconceived notions in choosing a diamond. A carat refers to the diamonds weight, not the size of the diamond. One carat is equal to .01 grams. Certain diamond cuts such as the marquise diamond and the cushion shape diamond actually look larger than their carat weight, whereas all the other diamond cuts look about right per their carat weight. Choosing a diamond with the right carat weight is essential since this normally is what the diamond is priced by
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