The Heart of the Ocean, from the movieTitanic was a fictional "character". It was a very large heart shaped blue diamond given by the lead villain to the lead heroine on a necklace as an engagement gift. In the story, the necklace was thrown off of the stern of the vessel that found the sunken ship by the heroine when she had grown old. Although the Heart of the Ocean didn't really exist, it was based on the real life Hope Diamond, estimated to be worth approximately $250 million.
There isn't a precise number value for the Millenium Star Diamond. The famous diamond is owned by De Beers, and was insured for 100 million pounds (about $160 million), but it's estimated to be actually worth much more. Lots more on famous diamonds at site below.
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr Toad
About $30
According to the attached advert, Wellington diamonds are 'pretty good' fake, counterfeit diamonds. It's probably worth what someone will pay you for the Wellington diamond ring.
Ihave one in excellent condition, original case, original owner,
I have elgin gold and diamond heart and i would like retail price
Yes, splitting a diamond is considered an irreversible change because it alters the physical structure of the diamond, making it difficult to reconstruct it to its original state without significant loss of material and value.
The value of a diamond depends on its cut, its clarity, its colour and its carat weight. A local jeweler can give you the answer you want.
You have an original value and a new value. Take the new value and subtract the original value. Then divide that number by the original value.
The value of a diamond depends on the quality of a diamond, which is determined by the diamond's attributes or its 4 C's (which include: color, clarity, cut and carat weight). Generally speaking, the higher the quality of the diamond, the higher its value will be.
Diamond weight per se is not valued as a single component of a diamond's overall value. Weight is included with colour, cut and clarity to value a diamond.
Gem is a generic word used to described something of value or that appears to be of value. Diamond is a very specific gem, and is of value and appears to be of value.
The value of a synthetic diamond is not as easy to determine as that of a real diamond. It's value may be exactly what a buyer will pay you for the stone.
Diamond value depends on the '4 Cs': cut, color, clarity and carat weight.
% increase = |original value - new value| /original value * 100%
% change = |original value - new value|/original value * 100%
A diamond's value is a result of several factors, especially: carat weight, shape, color grade, cut quality, clarity, and which gemological laboratory did the certification. Also, the "value" is different for a diamond dealer (who bases the value on the weekly Rapaport report), a diamond retailer (who adds in costs for the business's overhead), and someone interested in wearing or gifting the diamond (who needs to account for emotional value). For an estimate of a diamond's retail value, plug its characteristics into a diamond search engine, which can show the retail prices at a dozen different retailers side-by-side.