Brilliant (diamond cut)

Brilliant (diamond cut)

A brilliant is a diamond or other gemstone, cut in a particular form with numerous facets so as to have especial brilliancy. The shape resembles that of a cone and is meant to maximize light return through the top of the diamond.

Even with modern techniques, the cutting and polishing of a diamond crystal always results in a dramatic loss of weight; rarely is it less than 50%. The round brilliant cut is preferred when the crystal is an octahedron, as often two stones may be cut from one such crystal. Oddly shaped crystals such as macles are more likely to be cut in a "fancy cut"—that is, a cut other than the round brilliant—which the particular crystal shape lends itself to.

Facet proportions and names

The modern round brilliant consists of 58 facets (or 57 if the culet is excluded), ordinarily today cut in two pyramids placed base to base: 33 on the "crown" (the top half above the middle or "girdle" of the stone), truncated comparatively near its base by the table, and 25 on the "pavilion" (the lower half below the girdle), which has only the apex cut off to form the culet, around which 8 extra facets are sometimes added. In recent decades, most girdles are faceted. Many girdles have 32, 64, 80, or 96 facets; these facets are not counted in the total. While the facet count is standard, the actual proportions (crown height and angle, pavilion depth, etc.) are not universally agreed upon. One may speak of the "American cut" or the "Scandinavian standard" ("Scan. D.N."), to give but two examples.

These days many people have over used Tolkowsky's "ideal" model. The original model were general guidelines as there were several aspects of diamond cut that was not explored or accounted for in the original model. Excerpts from GIA article [http://www.gia.edu/research/1383/2280/article_detail.cfm What did Marcel Tolkowsky really say?] :

Because every facet has the potential to change a light ray's plane of travel, every facet must be considered in any complete calculation of light paths. Just as a two-dimensional slice of a diamond provides incomplete information about the three-dimensional nature of light behavior inside a diamond, this two-dimensional slice also provides incomplete information about light behavior outside the diamond. A diamond's panorama is three-dimensional. Although diamonds are highly symmetrical, light can enter a diamond from many directions and many angles. This factor further highlights the need to reevaluate Tolkowsky's results, and to recalculate the effects of a diamond's proportions on its appearance aspects.

Another important point to consider is that Tolkowsky did not follow the path of a ray that was reflected more than twice in the diamond. However, we now know that a diamond's appearance is composed of many light paths that reflect considerably more than two times within that diamond. Once again, we can see that Tolkowsky's predictions are helpful in explaining optimal diamond performance, but they are incomplete by today's technological standards.

Figures 1 and 2 show the facets of a round brilliant diamond.

Figure 1 assumes that the "thick part of the girdle" is the same thickness at all 16 "thick parts". It does not consider the effects of indexed upper girdle facets.

Figure 2 is adapted from [http://www.folds.net/diamond_design/index.html#fig_37 Figure 37 of Marcel Tolkowsky's Diamond Design] , which was originally published in 1919. Since 1919, the lower girdle facets have become longer. As a result, the pavilion main facets have become narrower.

Cut grading

The relationship between the crown angle and the pavilion angle has the greatest effect on the look of the diamond. A slightly steep pavilion angle can be complemented by a shallower crown angle, and "vice versa". Graphs showing this trade-off are available from [http://www.folds.net/diamond/index.html folds.net] .

Other proportions also affect the look of the diamond:
* The table ratio is highly significant.
* The length of the lower girdle facets affects whether Hearts and arrows can be seen in the stone, under certain viewers.
** Most round brilliant diamonds have roughly the same girdle thickness at all 16 "thick parts".
** So-called "cheated" girdles have thicker girdles where the main facets touch the girdle than where adjacent upper girdle facets touch the girdle. These stones weigh more (for a given diameter, average girdle thickness, crown angle, pavilion angle, and table ratio), and have worse optical performance (their upper girdle facets appear dark in some lighting conditions).
** So-called "painted" girdles have thinner girdles where the main facets touch the girdle than where adjacent upper girdle facets touch the girdle. These stones (such as EightStar-brand diamonds) have less light leakage at the edge of the stone (for a given crown angle, pavilion angle, and table ratio). Some diamonds with painted girdles receive lower grades in the GIA's cut grading system, for reasons explained in the GIA article [http://www.diamondcut.gia.edu/pdf/6_05_RDR_pg239_243pdf.pdf Painting and Digging Out] .

Several groups have developed diamond cut grading standards. They all disagree somewhat on which proportions make the best cut. There are certain proportions that are considered best by two or more groups however.
* The AGA standards may be the strictest. David Atlas (who developed the AGA standards) has suggested that they are overly strict.
* The HCA changed several times between 2001 and 2004. As of 2004, an HCA score below two represented an excellent cut. The HCA distinguishes between brilliant, Tolkowsky, and fiery cuts.
* The AGS standards changed in 2005 to better match Tolkowsky's model and Octonus' ray tracing results. The 2005 AGS standards penalize stones with "cheated" girdles. They grade from 0 to 10.
*The GIA began grading cut on every grading report beginning January 1, 2006 based on their comprehensive study of 20,000 proportions with 70,000 observations of 2,000 diamonds. The single descriptive words are as follows: Excellent, Very Good, Good, Fair, and Poor.The distance from the viewer's eye to the diamond is important.The 2005 AGS cut standards are based on a distance of 25 centimeters (about 10 inches).The 2004 HCA cut standards are based on a distance of 40 centimeters (about 16 inches).

Polish and symmetry are two important aspects of the cut. The polish grade describes the smoothness of the diamond's facets, and the symmetry grade refers to alignment of the facets. With poor polish, the surface of a facet can be dulled, and may create blurred or dulled sparkle. It may constantly look like it needs to be cleaned. With poor symmetry, light can be misdirected as it enters and exits the diamond.

Hearts and arrows phenomenon

A diamond that has the top facet or "table facet" exactly perpendicular to the bottom of the diamond or "pavilion" and has its other facets precisely aligned with excellent symmetry, may show patterns that look like arrows from the bottom and hearts from the top. Generally it will need to be viewed loose under a gemscope to see the pattern very well. Although the hearts and arrows property is indicative of a top-tier cut, it does not always mean the diamond will be the most brilliant. Optimal facet placement is the key to brilliance and more important than facet patterning. Not all ideal round cuts will have the hearts and arrows effect either.

ee also

* Diamond
* Diamond cut

References

* [http://www.eurostardiamond.com/diamonds/index.html Video: How a Diamond is Cut and Polished at Eurostar Diamonds International]
* Tolkowsky, Marcel (1919). "Diamond Design: A Study of the Reflection and Refraction of Light in a Diamond." London: E. & F.N. Spon, Ltd. ( [http://www.folds.net/diamond/index.html Web edition] edited by Jasper Paulsen, Seattle, 2001.)
* [http://www.cutstudy.com OctoNus Software] has posted several diamond cut studies, by various authors. OctoNus, Moscow State University, Bruce Harding, and others have posted work there.
* Holloway, Garry (2000-2004). [http://www.diamond-cut.com.au/ HCA: defining ideal cut diamonds] is a detailed explanation of the "Holloway Cut Advisor".
* GIA Various authors (2006). [http://www.diamondcut.gia.edu/pdf/6_05_RDR_pg239_243pdf.pdf Painting and Digging Out, GIA article 2006.]
* GIA Various authors (2001) - Tolkowsky limitations. [http://www.gia.edu/research/1383/2280/article_detail.cfm What did Tolkowsky really say?]
* Diamond Cut [http://www.skyfacet.com/diamond-cut-guide.php]


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