Jewelry Information
Consumer Guide on Gemstones
Source: Federal Trade
Commission
Buying
jewelry can be fun, exciting and
confusing. Whether you're considering a
gift of jewelry for someone special or
as a treat for yourself, take some time
to learn the terms used in the industry.
Here's some information to help you get
the best quality jewelry for your money,
whether you're shopping in a traditional
brick and mortar store
by catalog or online.
Jewelry Guide
Gold
Platinum
Gem Stones
Diamonds
Pearls
How to buy Jewelry
Gold
The word
gold,
used by itself, means
all
gold or 24 karat (24K) gold.
Because 24K gold is soft, it's usually
mixed with other metals to increase its
hardness and durability. If a piece of
jewelry is not 24 karat gold, the karat
quality should accompany any claim that
the item is gold.
The
karat
quality marking tells you what
proportion of gold is mixed with the
other metals. Fourteen karat (14K)
jewelry contains 14 parts of gold,
mixed in throughout with 10 parts
of base metal. The higher the karat
rating, the higher the proportion of
gold in the piece of jewelry.
Most
jewelry is marked with its karat
quality, although marking is not
required by law. Near the karat quality
mark, you should see the name or the
U.S. registered trademark of the company
that will stand behind the mark. The
trademark may be in the form of a name,
symbol or initials. If you don't see a
trademark accompanying a quality mark on
a piece of jewelry, look for another
piece.
Solid
gold refers to an item made of
any karat gold, if the inside of the
item is not hollow. The proportion of
gold in the piece of jewelry still is
determined by the karat mark.
Jewelry
can be plated with gold in a variety of
ways.
Gold plate refers to items that
are either mechanically plated,
electroplated, or plated by any other
means with gold to a base metal.
Eventually, gold plating wears away, but
how soon will depend on how often the
item is worn and how thick the plating
is.
Gold-filled,
gold
overlay and
rolled
gold
plate
are terms used to describe jewelry that
has a layer of at least 10 karat gold
mechanically bonded to a base metal. If
the jewelry is marked with one of these
terms, the term or abbreviation should
follow the karat quality of the gold
used (for example,
14K
Gold Overlay or
12K RGP).
If the layer of karat gold is less than
1/20th of the total weight of the item,
any marking must state the actual
percentage of karat gold, such as
1/40
14K Gold Overlay.
Gold
electroplate describes jewelry
that has a layer (at least .175 microns
thick) of a minimum of 10 karat gold
deposited on a base metal by an
electrolytic process. The terms
gold
flashed or
gold
washed describe products that
have an extremely thin electroplating of
gold (less than .175 microns thick).
This will wear away more quickly than
gold plate, gold-filled or gold
electroplate.
Platinum
Platinum,
Silver and Other Metals
Platinum is a precious metal
that costs more than gold. It usually is
mixed with other similar metals, known
as the platinum group metals: iridium,
palladium, ruthenium, rhodium and
osmium.
Different
markings are used on platinum jewelry as
compared with gold jewelry, based on the
amount of pure platinum in the piece.
The quality markings for platinum are
based on parts per thousand. For
example, the marking
900
Platinum means that 900 parts
out of 1000 are pure platinum, or in
other words, the item is 90% platinum
and 10% other metals. The abbreviations
for platinum -
Plat.
or Pt. - also can be used in
marking jewelry.
Items
that contain at least 950 parts per
thousand pure platinum can be marked
simply
platinum. Items that have at
least 850 parts per thousand pure
platinum can be marked with the amount
of pure platinum and the word platinum
or an abbreviation (for example,
950
platinum,
900
Plat. or
850 Pt.).
Jewelry that contains less than 850
parts per thousand pure platinum, but
has a total of 950 parts per thousand of
platinum group metals (of which at least
500 parts is pure platinum), may be
marked with both the amount of pure
platinum and the amount of the other
platinum group metals in the piece. For
example, the marking
600
Plat. 350 Irid. means that the
item has 600 parts per thousand (60%)
platinum, and 350 parts per thousand
(35%) iridium, totaling 950 parts per
thousand of platinum group metals, and
50 parts per thousand (5%) other metals.
The words
silver
or
sterling silver describe a
product that contains 92.5% silver.
Silver products sometimes may be marked
925
which means that 925 parts per thousand
are pure silver. Some jewelry may be
described as silverplate: a layer of
silver is bonded to a base metal. The
mark coin silver is used for compounds
that contain 90% silver. According to
the law, quality-marked silver also must
bear the name or a U.S. registered
trademark of the company or person that
will stand behind the mark.
Vermeil
(ver-may), a special type of gold plated
product, consists of a base of sterling
silver that is coated or plated with
gold.
Pewter
items may be described and marked as
such if they contain at least 90% tin.
Gemstones
Natural
gemstones are found in nature.
Laboratory-created stones, as
the name implies, are made in a
laboratory. These stones, which also are
referred to as laboratory-grown, [name
of manufacturer]-created, or synthetic,
have essentially the same chemical,
physical and visual properties as
natural gemstones. Laboratory- created
stones do not have the rarity of
naturally colored stones and they are
less expensive than naturally mined
stones. By contrast,
imitation stones look like
natural stones in appearance only, and
may be glass, plastic, or less costly
stones. Laboratory-created and imitation
stones should be clearly identified as
such.
Gemstones
may be measured by weight, size, or
both. The basic unit for weighing
gemstones is the carat, which is equal
to one-fifth (1/5th) of a gram. Carats
are divided into 100 units, called
points.
For example, a half-carat gemstone would
weigh .50 carats or 50 points. When
gemstones are measured by dimensions,
the size is expressed in millimeters
(for example, 7x5 millimeters).
Gemstone treatments or
enhancements refer to the way some gems
are treated to improve their appearance
or durability, or even change their
color. Many gemstones are treated in
some way. The effects of some treatments
may lessen or change over time and some
treated stones may require special care.
Some enhancements also affect the value
of a stone, when measured against a
comparable untreated stone.
Jewelers
should tell you whether the gemstone
you're considering has been treated
when: the treatment is not permanent;
the treated stone requires special care;
or the treatment significantly affects
the value of the gemstone.
Some
common treatments that you may be told
about and their effects include:
-
Heating can lighten, darken
or change the color of some gems, or
improve a gemstone's clarity.
-
Irradiation can add more
color to colored diamonds, certain
other gemstones and pearls.
-
Impregnating some gems with
colorless oils, wax or resins makes
a variety of imperfections less
visible and can improve the
gemstones' clarity and appearance.
-
Fracture filling hides
cracks or fractures in gems by
injecting colorless plastic or glass
into the cracks and improves the
gemstones' appearance and
durability.
-
Diffusion treatment adds
color to the surface of colorless
gems; the center of the stone
remains colorless.
-
Dyeing adds color and
improves color uniformity in some
gemstones and pearls.
-
Bleaching lightens and
whitens some gems, including jade
and pearls.
Diamonds
A diamond's
value is based on four criteria: color,
cut, clarity, and carat. The clarity and
color of a diamond usually are graded.
However, scales are not uniform: a
clarity grade of "slightly included" may
represent a different grade on one
grading system versus another, depending
on the terms used in the scale. Make
sure you know how a particular scale and
grade represent the color or clarity of
the diamond you're considering. A
diamond can be described as "flawless"
only if it has no visible surface or
internal imperfections when viewed under
10-power magnification by a skilled
diamond grader.
As with
other gems,
diamond
weight usually is stated in
carats. Diamond weight may be described
in decimal or fractional parts of a
carat. If the weight is given in decimal
parts of a carat, the figure should be
accurate to the last decimal place. For
example, ".30 carat" could represent a
diamond that weighs between .295 - .304
carat. Some retailers describe diamond
weight in fractions and use the fraction
to represent a range of weights. For
example, a diamond described as 1/2
carat could weigh between .47 - .54
carat. If diamond weight is stated as
fractional parts of a carat, the
retailer should disclose two things:
that the weight is not exact, and the
reasonable range of weight for each
fraction or the weight tolerance being
used.
Some
diamonds may be treated to improve their
appearance in similar ways as other
gemstones. Since these treatments
improve the clarity of the diamond, some
jewelers refer to them as clarity
enhancement. One type of treatment -
fracture filling - conceals
cracks in diamonds by filling them with
a foreign substance. This filling
may not be permanent and jewelers
should tell you if the diamond you're
considering has been fracture-filled.
Another
treatment -
lasering - involves the use of
a laser beam to improve the appearance
of diamonds that have black inclusions
or spots. A laser beam is aimed at the
inclusion. Acid is then forced through a
tiny tunnel made by the laser beam to
remove the inclusion. Lasering is
permanent and a laser-drilled stone
does not require special care.
While a
laser-drilled diamond may appear as
beautiful as a comparable untreated
stone, it may not be as valuable. That's
because an untreated stone of the same
quality is rarer and therefore more
valuable. Jewelers should tell you
whether the diamond you're considering
has been laser-drilled.
Imitation diamonds, such as
cubic zirconia, resemble diamonds in
appearance but are much less costly.
Certain laboratory-created gemstones,
such as lab-created moissanite, also
resemble diamonds and may not be
adequately detected by the instruments
originally used to identify cubic
zirconia. Ask your jeweler if he has the
current testing equipment to distinguish
between diamonds and other lab-created
stones.
Pearls
Natural
or real
pearls are made by oysters and
other mollusks.
Cultured pearls also are grown
by mollusks, but with human
intervention; that is, an irritant
introduced into the shells causes a
pearl to grow.
Imitation pearls are man-made
with glass, plastic, or organic
materials.
Because
natural pearls are very rare, most
pearls used in jewelry are either
cultured or imitation pearls. Cultured
pearls, because they are made by oysters
or mollusks, usually are more expensive
than imitation pearls. A cultured
pearl's value is largely based on its
size, usually stated in millimeters, and
the quality of its nacre coating, which
gives it luster. Jewelers should tell
you if the pearls are cultured or
imitation.
Some
black, bronze, gold, purple, blue and
orange pearls, whether natural or
cultured, occur that way in nature;
some, however, are dyed through various
processes. Jewelers should tell you
whether the colored pearls are naturally
colored, dyed or irradiated.
Gemstone Articles
By
Somsak
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