Jewelry Design and Fabrication Tools At Great Prices !
Just one source for scaled down tools among the smaller vendors.Stop supporting Rio Grande and it's inflated price points, limited & proprietarily labeled goods, and give business to small scale vendors.Precision Products offers a reasonable catalogue as does www.RosenthalJewelers Supply.com, and www.FDJtools.com to name a few!
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CZ's and Customer satisfaction
Try "gold buyers": often these store operators take out the stones and have jars full laying around ( although not in a 6.5mm size as that will run - even from a "store" that knows zero about jewelry but has the capitol to begin buying and selling metals ( which pretty much sums up 90% of the proliferation of "gold buyers" out there) in the thousands- for a 6.5mm stone.To buy from a wholesaler to the trade you will probably need to have a budget of 7-8 thousand for a fair stone..not good, not great just big.. even if they offer you what's called ' rose cut ' ,included and a take out! Even these resellers that have no real experience and less knowledge in most cases realize the size you are looking for is not usual from the hundreds of "bridal sets" that have potentially crossed their store's threshold and the "take outs' came from .
In your situation I would try and explain to your client that a white sapphire ,topaz or zircon, if a natural stone is preferred or insisted upon, would be available in that budget range...some stones have higher refractive indices than others so you would have to see the actual stone you are buying rather than trying to find it online without the possibility of inspection before payment...a tricky proposition..best to have a dealer you know or have had prior relationship with in business or engage a jeweler you know with a reliable supply chain to help..
Otherwise top of the line cubic zirconia ( stones that are optically flawless and will give plenty of sparkle to a ring) are quite a bit under the $500 budget .Really high quality CZ's don't look as cheap as lower quality stones.A lower quality CZ has a visible to the naked eye spectrum at every angle, while "diamond simulants" other than Moissanites are stones of the same chemical composition but produced by a different method than the fast growing CZ's sold in quantity or Moissanites- a risky simulated diamond as they are very very brittle, and in my opinion nowhere near worth the price for the end product that varies batch to batch, with many recent recalled lots due to imperfections and breakage, even though they are " guaranteed"). These are called CVD 's or CVD process(ed) - carbon vapour deposition processed cubic zirconia.
This type has fairly recently ( 1990's or thereabout) become available in white or colourless stones,and until recently were available only up to about 1.5 carats- far from the 6.5mm you seek ! ( the density of natural diamond material is less than that of cz by any process so estimating isn't equal to estimating the weight of a diamond of that size into carat weight).An example is one of the largest recently sold on a popular jewelry e-commerce site: a 1.24-carat princess-cut diamond, J color, VS1 with very good cut graded by the International Gemological Institute (IGI) was priced at $3,494.82 as a loose stone! A Moisannite is yet higher, with natural diamond still higher for the same grade, etc. certification.
..While cheap CZ's are available in any size and a range of colours ( except the white and colourless varieties of the simulants not possible in "regular" mass produced cz's) for next to nothing to the trade. For instance one of my favourite Jeweler's tool,supplies and equipment vendors has 7 mm x 7 mm square cz's on sale at the moment for $1.56 USD each, compared to the regular wholesale price of $2.60 each! ) large CVD cubic zirconia is about 20% less than natural diamond.Also cz's produced just after the dawn of the science was being explored ( around the 1930's- when crystals of cz large enough to be cut and faceted were first produced at the turn of the 20th century) can also run about half the price of natural diamond material- provided the sellers of such vintage "costume" jewelry know what they have- these stones are generally found in high end antique dealer's shoppes or those jewelers that actually know estate jewelry and have extensive testing equipment to back up their claims ( and usually some GIA or equivalent certification displayed in the store) !
So why you undertook making a mounting without the stone seems a bit backwards, to me anyway, the reality of finding what you may have "promised" your client is an entirely different task! First I'm betting you are a novice to jewelry making and as such what you do want to try and find is a machine cut stone- no matter what it is made of, provided your calculations were correct in making the mounting for a 6.5mm anything.hand cut stones vary in girdle, and pavilion.So provided you have been exacting in your model, or setting making until now, at this point you are either locked into that size, or can remove the setting from shank and melt it down , roll it out and rework it to a more suitable stone for the budget or buy another white stone altogether ( the sapphire, topaz, spinel, or even a silver tourmaline are some possibilities) with the client's knowledge..If you signed any contract- now is the time to admit your knowledge of " the current diamond market is lacking " and refund their deposit(s) or otherwise make alternative arrangements to accommodate the completion of the job to their satisfaction ..I wish i could say differently but what is done is done and now you have to repair the situation.
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