Diamonds:

Ethically Sourced Natural Diamonds:

Diamante goes above and beyond to offer ethically sourced natural diamonds that have been selected for their ethical and environmentally responsible origins.

Natural diamonds are formed by the heat and pressure of the Earth, from 1 to 3 billion years ago, making a natural diamond the oldest thing you will ever touch. The value of natural diamonds comes from their uniqueness and rarity as a age old gem.

Lab Grown Diamonds:

Diamante sources its lab grown diamonds from manufacturing facilities that have cutting edge technologies and have gone through a thorough polishing, scanning, processing, and cutting process. Lab created diamonds offer excellent value and the culture is rapidly shifting towards lab grown diamonds being responsible choice which does not require any diamond mining.

Lab created diamonds are grown in highly controlled laboratory environments using advanced technological processes that duplicate the conditions under which diamonds naturally develop. Lab created diamonds display the same physical, chemical, and optical characteristics as natural diamonds, and exhibit the same fire, scintillation, and sparkle. Lab created diamonds offer excellent value and are a responsible choice as they do not require any diamond mining.

Certification:

All our diamonds are certified by the two leading names in the industry, IGI and GIA. A unique identification number is assigned to each diamond.

The 4 C’s of Diamonds:

At Diamante our experts will work with you to educate you on the unique characteristics of a diamond and help you find one that works best to create your masterpiece.

Cut determines how a natural diamond interacts with light.

Shape, symmetry, and proportions determine how a diamond transmits light and sparkles.

Clarity refers to a natural diamond's absence of inclusions.

The extreme conditions by which diamonds form in the Earth can result in inclusions within the stone and external blemishes.

Carat is the measurement of a natural diamond's weight.

Every carat 200 milligrams. And a full carat diamond is becoming rarer by the day.

Color Grade most often reveals a natural diamond's lack of hue.

Excluding “fancy colors”, the closer a natural diamond is to “colorless”, the rarer and more generally valuable it is.