The weight of carats of diamond and precious stone is
crucial for the pricing of the gem. Before buying the gems and jewellery, know
what a carat is and care about your purchase.
Although many people think of a carat (ct) as a measure of the size of the
gemstone or diamond, a carat is not a particular format. It is, in fact, a
specific measure of metric weight. Moreover, the carat is different from karat
(kt), which is a measure of the United States for the purity of gold.
The carat is a primary measure of the gem and diamond industry because in just
about every level of transaction and trade often with the exception of the
retail sales of consumer end diamonds and gemstones are sold by their weight
carats. Buyers of common sense knows the current values of special stones and
understand how to negotiate further, where to buy loose stones, antique jewellery
from new or second-hand jewellery.
History of the measure in carats of the gem trade

Since ancient times, the standard weight used for gems in the gem trade has
been the gold. In the new international diamond carat of 200 milligrams,
Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, volume 47, 1914,
the gem expert George Frederick Kunz writes that before the year 1913, the
carat weight in different country to country. The early gem traders around the
world have used or very small and relatively uniform grain to measure small
items such as precious and precious stones. Many traders and grain planted
specifically to be collected and used as a measure of weight. The seeds of
wheat and carob were particularly notable as the unit of measure for weight.
According to the Gemmological Institute of America, today's modern pearl grain,
wheat and grains troy pharmacists and AV they all descended from the grain of
wheat. Moreover, the modern metric carat has evolved from an ancient carob
seed.
Even if the barrels were relatively universal term, the exact weight of a carat
was not. Around the world, these ancient, and several grains in size and weight
that make unequal measure carats from one place to another. For example,
according to Encyclopaedia Britannica, while the carats of London were equal to
3.168 grains troy, or 0.2053 grams, while the carat of Florence was 0.1972
grams and carats of Amsterdam were 0.2057 grams.
Also, in earlier times, the weight of a carat was calculated from the integers
carats more fractions (1/2, 1/4, 1/8. 1/32. Or 1/64) of a carat. In general,
this practice continues today. However, the actual weights of loose diamonds
and precious stones are calculated quite precisely.
Standard weight of carat for gems
In 1913, led by French measures Conférence Générale, for an international
concern of weights and measures, many countries around the world came together
and agreed to define the metric carat as a unit of weight is equal to 1/5 of a
gram, or 200 milligrams. This is the measure used in industry today and
gemstone jewellery, according to the International measures office, the board
of directors responsible for the International Conference.
How
to choose diamond jewellery
Since the fractions of a carat can represent hundreds or even thousands of
dollars, diamonds are measured by thousandths of a carat and rounded to the
nearest hundredth, or point. There are 100 points to a carat. Thus, for
example, a stone of half-carat is 50 points. In the U.S., the Federal Trade
Commission strictly regulates how the jewellery industry is the weight of the
gemstone.
When buying jewellery featuring more than a diamond or precious stone, be aware
of the difference between the coach, which means the carat (singular), the cts
(plural) and a stone as soon as the central or primary of CTW, which stands for
carat amounted to the weight and refers to the total weight of all the stones
together, in a part.
Old diamonds may weigh more

An important note for buyers of antique gems: in the beginning, a carat might
actually weigh more than the modern metric carats. Be on the lookout for this
if you are shopping for antique jewellery or gems, particularly those offered
for sale which may include original reports or certificates of sale. For
example, an old European cut diamond in an antique ring provided with the
original receipt (which specifies the diamond as a 1. 50 cents), will most likely
be larger than 1. 50 cents by today's standards.
Moreover, the only way to accurately assign a weight to a diamond or a precious
stone is weighing the loose stone, using proper equipment before it is set in
jewellery. So, unless a jeweller unset and recovered a precious stone in a part
of jewellery (a piece of property or particularly second-hand), or there is a
certificate that accompanied the loose stone before it was set in jewellery,
the weight specified by a set of precious stone in jewellery should be considered
an estimate.
As the weight of carats hits the pricing of the gemstone and diamond
As stated earlier, the carat weight is important in industry because of the gem
and diamond gemstones are priced and sold by the weight of their per-carat. Put
simply, the finest and most limited the precious stone, the higher the
price-per-carat. For this purpose, as a gem increases in size, price-per-carat
increases usually because in most cases, the larger, the stones of gem-quality
are more rare smaller stones.
Also, most varieties of the gem, the escalation in the price per-carat does not
increase in direct relation to the increase in size. Usually, the price
increases are much greater than the corresponding increases in the size of the
gem. For example, although two-times the size of the weight of 2 ct diamond
will be well-more than twice the price of 1 ct diamond. In fact, a larger gem
can be three, or ten times more expensive than many other smaller stone of
similar quality. A 3 ct diamond will be even more disproportionate in price is
that 2 to 1 ct stones.
Size of diamond versus weight: Looking up and diffusion can mask the true
weight
Currently, there is an impression dell' standard-sizing for diamonds, meaning
that many people think that all the diamonds of 1 ct have the same measures.
Not true. As mentioned earlier, there is no particular format that relates to
the particular weight of the gemstone.
When referring to the size of the gemstone and diamond, you're usually
referring to the format of the profile of the belt. The format of the profile
of the belt is sometimes referred to as the spread or the format facing up.
The misconception that all the diamonds of 1 ct are the same format, for
example, is partially supported by the introduction of aggressive marketing of
the diamond industry and the consumer preference for round brilliant cut
diamonds of a style particular (mainly diamond engagement rings). Thus,
although it may be safe to use, say, 6. 5mm, as a measure of the average
benchmark for an average - ct round brilliant diamond, this is only an estimate
in terms of size. A 1 diamond ct that is more shallow cut, the larger facing
upwards, to mean the diameter of the belt will be greater and, perhaps, when
viewed from above, the diamond will appear to be up to 1. 25 cts. The deeper
cut 1 ct stone will show a smaller spread and can not look great as its
official weight of 1 ct.
Consider the format facing upward as well as weight
Compared to the diamond-shaped and round brilliant faceted styles, size for the
diamond cutting work including pear, marquise, radiant point, the princess,
emerald cut and the point, as well as others is more difficult to generalize in
terms of expected format. For this reason, it is often more useful to buy a
format upwards particular in millimetres, that is to purchase for a specific
weight of carats. Moreover, given facet model, such as cutting the square of
the princess, for example, are known to be slightly more deep, so their size
upwards will generally be smaller similarly around the brilliant cut.
Knowing that many beautifully cuts, larger upwards on smaller diamonds of their
expected format, can lead to a happy advantage of prices for an astute buyer.
One final note, because the precious stones have different mineral compositions,
their density or specific gravity, is not the same. Thus, different types of
precious stones usually have different weights of carats when their formats
facing upwards of a millimetre may be similar.
For example, the specific weight for the diamond is 3.5 and the specific weight
for corundum, or sapphire, is 3.9-4.1. The sapphire is heavier than the
diamond, so a 1 ct sapphire will be smaller in size than the same-ct diamond
weight 1. In contrast, the specific weight for the emerald is 2.6, making for a
1 ct emerald gem of the largest of the three jewels of 1 ct.