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Etheryte 5 hours ago

Links and examples? Last I checked, this applied to industrial diamonds, not jewelery.

saghm 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

My wife and I got our engagement and wedding rings from Krikawa[1]. The stones on her ring were synthetic, extremely affordable given the size, and visually flawless.

(Not quite as related, but the process was also really easy; we were able to communicate everything over email, get sizing kits mailed to us rather than having to go in person, and they sent us visual mock-ups and procedurally generated 3D videos of what the results would look like, which was helpful because the rings my wife picked out had been temporarily delisted as they found an issue with it that they wanted to fix, so they went ahead and figured it out so they could make them for us without us having to wait for them to appear on the site again).

[1]: https://www.krikawa.com/

Sharlin 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Synthetic gem-quality diamonds are old news by now. Since the 2010s, you have been able to make essentially flawless diamonds by vacuum deposition, of higher quality than anything found in nature, weighing up to a hundred karats or so.

They’re also vastly more ethically produced than most natural diamonds, and don’t have prices inflated by the artificial scarcity imposed by the De Beers monopoly.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_diamond

bluedevil2k 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Monopoly? DeBeers itself is virtually worthless now, its parent Anglo American can’t even sell it at a huge discount.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/timtreadgold/2026/02/22/diamond...

dwd 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Try somewhere like Blue Nile [1]. The price of natural diamonds increases exponential once you go over 1ct and the size becomes rarer.

Here's a quick comparison on just size, clarity and the visibility of inclusions.

A 1ct very good quality stone, E-F, VVS2 or better, no fluorescence - you're looking at a 88% reduction in cost ($700 vs $6,000).

Jump to 2ct and it's $2,300 vs $32,000.

At 3ct, the lab grown is still only $4,200 where the natural at that size starts at $82,000.

[1] https://www.bluenile.com/diamonds

A_D_E_P_T 4 hours ago | parent [-]

And in China and India they're roughly 3x cheaper than that, i.e. a 3ct lab-grown stone is somewhere under $1500. (I posted a link to one absolutely typical example in a previous comment.)

It's amusing that the price of gold has skyrocketed just as the price of diamonds has nosedived. Some old rings, which were valued for the small diamonds they carried, are now more valuable for their weight in gold.

A_D_E_P_T 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

How large do you want them?

> https://item.taobao.com/item.htm?id=828627288905&skuId=55567...

This ring goes up to 5ct, and some other listings are at 7ct.

A 3ct example at the link, which would easily be a >$20k ring under other circumstances and isn't too comically large, will run you about $1500.

There are many, many others.

js2 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

https://old.reddit.com/r/labdiamond/

Our_Benefactors 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

James Allen, Brilliant Earth, Jared, Blue Nile, all of these vendors sell lab created diamonds openly and let you compare side by side. A diamond that’s $10k natural can be had for $1500 lab created without any scarcity.

3 hours ago | parent [-]
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