You could always ask the internet seller to provide add the cost of a certificate from a reputable source to your purchase. If you have already bought the diamond you could still ask your internet seller for this or, alternatively, take it to a reputable "bricks and mortar" jeweller for an evaluation. Most jewellers can carry out an evaluation and either charge a flat rate fee or a percentage based on the value outcome.
It’s very simple really. Before you buy a diamond, you need to do your research in terms of the 5 C’s: cut, carat, clarity, color and certificate. Be aware of what these terms mean, compare prices from various jewelers and always make sure that a legitimate laboratory such as GIA, IGI and HRD certifies the diamond ring.
You can only find real love in person, but meeting couldn't hurt.
Half carat is the term used to measure the weight of the real diamond. A diamond's weight does not define or detract from the fact that the diamond is or is not a real diamond.
You can take your diamond to a local jeweler who can use a probe to help you figure out if the diamond is a real diamond.
No, a simulant diamond is a fake diamond.
a real diamond can scratch glass and if the diamond gets scratched it's fake
I have never heard of an Amatory diamond before. After an internet search, the only reference that I found to it was on ebay. It may be a trade name for another type of stone. There are many misnomers in the gem trade. I would have a GIA jeweler appraise the "diamond".
Take your black diamond to a jeweler and ask the jeweler to use the probe to verify that the diamond is a real diamond.
Take your chocolate diamond to a jeweler, who can use a probe to confirm, or not, that the diamond is real, or not.
Supposedly the only way to distinguish the best manufactured white diamond from a real diamond is the fake diamonds are flawless, and no real diamond can be truly flawless. I always wondered about this though, because how hard would it be to add flaws to a fake diamond to make it appear real? So my opinon is there is no way to tell the difference between a real diamond and a fake diamond.
Not a real diamond, no.
Yes.
Yes