Diamonds Cutting
How Diamonds Are Cut
In their most natural form, diamonds are – well – quite ugly. They have no luster or shine, and in fact, look like nothing more than
broken glass. A diamond must be cut, and then polished before it actually becomes a thing of beauty.
Diamonds are cut with saws, into round shapes. From the rounded shape, other shapes may be
cut, such as heart shapes – but the shape is less important than the quality of the cutting that is being done. It's diamonds cutting quality
that determines the true commercial value of diamonds.
Diamonds cutting precision
If the diamond is poorly cut, it will lose light, and it will not sparkle and shine very well. Each facet of the diamond must be carefully cut
into the geometrical shapes that allow the diamond to sparkle and shine, then the entire diamond is cut into a specific shape, such as an emerald
cut or a princess cut diamond.
Once the cut is done, the diamond is put into a dop, which resembles a cup with another diamond – only a diamond is strong enough to smooth
the edges of another diamond. Once the diamond has been cut and shaped, and had the edges smoothed in the dop, it is polished on a scaif or a
diamond polishing wheel.
While mining diamonds is a dirty and hard job, diamonds cutting ultimately puts the true value on a
diamond.
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