Diamonds Pictures and News - Yenra

Million dollar diamond is cut to show new cutting method vastly brightens, beautifies even tiniest stones

Diamonds Pictures

The 13.41-carat "American Star," now on tour of America, was cut to demonstrate the superior brilliance and precision of the 8Star diamond. The 8-rayed pattern clearly visible in this photo is a unique visual signature of the 8Star diamond that proves all facets are aligned.

To show the vast improvement in brilliance when diamonds are cut using high-precision technology, 8Star Diamond Co. is sending a $1-million diamond on tour to demonstrate the success of its new cutting method.

To prove the 8Star approach benefits any diamond, the company bought a $1-million 15-carat diamond given the highest ratings for color, clarity and cutting by the Gemological Institute of America and is exhibiting the much-improved 13.41-carat recut, now the "American Star," in its 45 franchise stores nationwide.

"When it comes to diamonds, it isn't size that matters. It's sizzle," says Richard von Sternberg, 8Star's president. "Most diamonds would have to lose at least 15% of their weight to become as beautiful as ours. Since we believe consumers should pay only for beauty, we cut only for beauty."

Using an exclusive light-tracking instrument called a Firescope(TM), 8Star cutters align facets so precisely their diamonds achieve the highest brilliance possible -- making even the tiniest engagement stone blaze with light.

To most of 8Star's competitors who cut for bulk not beauty, sacrificing 10% of a giant jewel's weight is a catastrophic loss. But von Sternberg sees the loss as a gain.

The American Star took six weeks to recut after ten months of planning. On average, however, 8Stars require 32 hours to complete -- still a long time compared to 8 hours for other fine diamonds. But cutting for beauty takes time.

"One reason for the slow grind is that 8Star cutters consult with the Firescope at every stage of work," von Sternberg says. "That usually means 200 Firescope checks. In the case of the American Star, I lost count at 500."

Without a Firescope, diamond cutting is guesswork, according to von Sternberg. "With it, our cutters can look inside a diamond and fix problems fatal to diamond beauty other cutters never see."

The Firescope isn't only a guidance tool for cutters. It's a quality assurance tool for consumers. When a diamond's facets are aligned, they make a distinctive 8-rayed pattern called an "8star." This pattern serves as visual proof that a diamond has reached what von Sternberg calls "8Star's norm of perfection."