Smaller brilliants
Thursday, November 13th, 2008Smaller brilliants are often not fully cut, that is, they do not possess the recognized number of facets, and these are known as single cut, half cut, or eight cut, in the trade. Such stones are often used in jewelry which contains a number of small stones, and their value is below that of the fully cut brilliant.
The girdle is rarely polished since it is almost entirely hidden when the stone is set. But if it is polished, it should be of knife edge thickness yet not extremely thin. Odd shapes lose in brilliancy, but an elongated culet to match the shape reduces this fault. There should be no culet in a modern cut stone, which should taper to a sharp point. A stone cut too “thin” or too “flat” gives a fish-eye effect and will have little value. A number of recently cut stones have this tendency of flatness, that is, too broad a table relative to the depth of the stone. A smaller number of facets than the normal, including a relatively small table, gives the stone a lumpy appearance, a fault quite common with old cut stones. These, which dealers class as “old cut,” “old mine cut” . or “Victorian cut,” realize appreciably less than the stones of modern cut. But if of good quality otherwise, and of some size, such stones are often worth re-cutting to the modern brilliant shape.