Complete Explanation of AGS Cut System
Transcription
Complete Explanation of AGS Cut System
Foundation, Research Results and Application of the New AGS Cut Grading System By Peter Yantzer, Jim Caudill, Dr. Jose Sasian © 2005 American Gem Society This presentation is divided into three sections: Foundation, Research Results, and Application / Methodology. The Foundation information will detail our understanding of diamond cut. The Research Results will show you what we found with respect to the Round Brilliant and the Square Princess Cut. The Application / Methodology section will explain the new AGS Cut Grading System. © 2005 American Gem Society Foundation © 2005 American Gem Society The new AGS System will take into account the following factors: an observer, a close viewing distance, obscuration, contrast, appearance as distance varies, brilliance, fire, leakage, scintillation, weight ratio or ‘spread’, tilt, girdle thickness, length-to-width ratio, polish, symmetry, durability and taste. In April 2002 at the AGS Conclave in Vancouver B.C. we proposed: “An Ideal Cut Diamond performs better than other similarly cut diamonds over the broadest range of usually encountered lighting and observer conditions. Because the lighting and the observer circumstances so greatly effect the perception of a diamond’s beauty, they must be considered in relation to the diamond’s proportions when assessing cut quality.” Premise: In order to build grading systems and teach them, assumptions and simplifications must be made. © 2005 American Gem Society During the course of this presentation you’ll be seeing images: Our ray tracing software gives us various values and can also color code the angular ranges from which a diamond draws light. The ASET is our Angular Spectrum Evaluation Tool and we pronounce it like the word ‘asset’. It allows us to take color-coded photographs of actual diamonds. DiamCalc is a software program created by the OctoNus Company at Moscow State University in Russia. It has an abundance of features that allows us to model virtual diamonds, as well as model ‘skin’ maps or wire frames of real diamonds. © 2005 American Gem Society Here are images that show the angular ranges and their color code: Top or Bird’s Eye View © 2005 American Gem Society Side View © 2005 American Gem Society Result © 2005 American Gem Society Assumptions for Average Human Being and Closest Observation Point We have defined a human observer as the average of a 5th percentile female and a 95th percent male. Reference MIL-STD-1472D: We set the close observation point at 25 cm. This is the “distance of most distinct vision.” References: http://www.books.md/N/dic/nearpointoftheeye.php http://www.swc.cc.ca.us/~jveal/PHYSICS/Phys274/thin_lenses.htm http://badger.physics.wisc.edu/lab/manual2/node19.html © 2005 American Gem Society Here is the geometry of our average human observer viewing a diamond: Because of the difference between whole head obscuration and the distance to each eye, we assume a cone of 30 degrees at 25 cm. We also evaluate a diamond’s appearance using a cone of 40 degrees at 25 cm. © 2005 American Gem Society Obscuration The act or operation of obscuring; the state of being obscured; as, the obscuration of the moon in an eclipse. Reference: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=obscuration In order to simplify the complex relationship of a viewer, the surrounding environment, and the diamond’s proportions, we propose the concept of obscuration. There is no doubt that an observer greatly influences a diamond’s appearance when he or she is viewing it. Additionally, the surrounding environment can obscure. Premises: Obscuration is the primary producer of contrast. The observer’s head is the most common cause of obscuration. © 2005 American Gem Society Diamonds do not possess much inherent contrast. Here’s a simulation of the Tolkowsky model ( p4075t53c345s50lg78 ) in isometric lighting without the presence of a viewer at 25 cm: Face Up © 2005 American Gem Society 5 degree tilt 10 degree tilt Looking at the same stone, we’ll add a 30 degree cone of obscuration: © 2005 American Gem Society The Observer’s Head Our ‘average’ human being’s head obscures a cone of 30 degrees or plus/minus 15 degrees from the normal (perpendicular to the table facet) at 25 cm. Our ‘average’ human being’s head is circular in shape. Assumption: The ability to discern differences in diamond cut quality decreases as the distance from the observer’s eyes increases. © 2005 American Gem Society The Observer’s Body The observer’s body also obscures a diamond. In a typical viewing scenario, the closer a diamond gets to an observer’s body, the less the effect produced by the observer’s body. Or to say this another way, as distance increases, the effect of an observer’s body increases. This may seem paradoxical, so let’s look at a typical viewing scenario. © 2005 American Gem Society The Observer’s Body These viewers are looking at a diamond at about 10 inches from their eyes. As you can see, the observers’ bodies obscure somewhere between 30 and 40 degrees of lighting that may be coming from behind them. © 2005 American Gem Society The Observer’s Body Here’s what happens to that angular relationship at a viewing distance of 16 inches. Now the observers are obscuring somewhere between 40 and 50 degrees. © 2005 American Gem Society Contrast Premise: Contrast can produce positive and negative optical effects. Humans are ‘hard wired’ to detect edges. Contrast provides us with these edges. Here’s an example of a shape with virtually no contrast and the same shape with contrast. Humans find the image on the right to be very appealing compared to the left. Other researchers on diamond cutting have pointed out that the presence of contrast enhances our perception of diamond brilliance. We agree. © 2005 American Gem Society Humans are sensitive to the amount and distribution of contrast. Examples of too little and too much contrast: © 2005 American Gem Society Poor distribution of contrast: © 2005 American Gem Society Frequency We are also ‘hard wired’ to find certain frequencies appealing. When shown this frequency chart, the majority of people will pick a spot close to the area marked in red as being the most appealing. We instinctively find the frequencies to the left as being too broad and the frequencies to the right as being too narrow. In addition to contrast, frequency has implications for scintillation as well. © 2005 American Gem Society Let’s apply a 30 degree cone of obscuration to different round brilliant cut diamonds: 41.1 Pavilion Angle Negative – no primary contrast © 2005 American Gem Society Tolkowsky Positive Effect Nail Head Negative – too much We have named two types of obscuration induced contrast – primary and secondary. Primary contrast is the face up and/or stationary view and therefore static in nature. Secondary contrast is the light/dark pattern as the stone moves and is dynamic in nature. Below is an illustration of how the primary contrast at 25 cm varies with amount of the angular obscuration for the Tolkowsky model. ~21 degrees No effect ~25 degrees Positive effect ~44 degrees Still Positive ~47 degrees Negative effect It is evident that the Tolkowsky model handles a large range of obscuration in a positive manner. Most importantly, it handles this obscuration in the range a human observer’s head (30 degrees) provides. Or, you may say that it accommodates, in a positive manner, a wide range of different head sizes. © 2005 American Gem Society Examples of secondary contrast using 30 degrees of obscuration at 25 cm: 4 degrees of tilt 5 degrees of tilt 6 degrees of tilt 8 degrees of tilt 9 degrees of tilt 10 degrees of tilt 7 degrees of tilt 11 degrees of tilt 1) Very little happens to the light/dark pattern in the first 4 to 5 degrees of tilt. 2 As the optical ‘windows’ or compound mirrors go from light to dark and back to light, you see fire. Assumption: Contrast also enhances our ability to see fire. © 2005 American Gem Society As you have seen, contrast is a two edged sword – too little, too much, or poor distribution is ‘bad’. The right amount with pleasing distribution is ‘good’. Contrast is a very important aspect of diamond appearance. Fortunately, contrast in the standard round brilliant is independent of table size. It’s a function of crown and pavilion angles, influenced slightly by star and lower girdle height. This allows us to create an obscuration chart: In fancy shapes, the contrast produced by obscuration is unique to each cut. It is, however, very important to assess the effect of obscuration for each shape. © 2005 American Gem Society Diamond Appearance as Distance Increases Assumption: The ability to discern differences in cutting quality decreases as distance increases. Our starting point is 25 cm or 9.84 inches. Premise: As distance increases, the effect of an observer’s head decreases. Tolkowsky at 25 cm at 40 cm at 80 cm p4075t53c345s50lg78 Inferior make at 25 cm © 2005 American Gem Society at 40 cm p393t55c330s50lg80 at 80 cm The previous slide demonstrates that an inferior make can look quite good as the distance increases between your eyes and the stone. Great makes look great both ‘up close’ and far away. Inferior makes are readily discernable as inferior ‘up close’. © 2005 American Gem Society Brilliance Assumption: The world is lit from above. The terms ‘brilliance’ and ‘brightness’ are not interchangeable in this presentation. By color-coding angular ranges ( green = 0 to 45 degrees, red = 45 to 75 degrees, blue = 75 to 90 degrees from the horizon) we can model where diamonds gather light. © 2005 American Gem Society Tolkowsky p4075t53c345s50lg78 Fish Eye p370t62c345s50lg78 Nail Head p440t62c345s50lg78 Well made round diamonds gather a large portion of light from the angular range of 45 to 75 degrees from the horizon. This is the area where a diamond is most likely to find direct sources of light and that light will miss the observer’s head and body. In the above illustration, you see that a fish eye also gathers a large portion of light from this range and yet it is universally accepted to be an inferior make. So it’s obvious that brightness alone does not complete the description of brilliance. © 2005 American Gem Society Many fancy shapes don’t gather a large portion of light from this range and they tend to leak a lot of light. Here are examples of an oval and a princess cut. The color-coded images here are backlit to show the white leakage areas. The photo real images are not backlit. © 2005 American Gem Society We know from experience that well made rounds are brilliant. We also know that fancy shapes can appear brilliant as well. So it seems paradoxical that we can perceive both as being brilliant when the round gathers a majority of high quality light ( red ) and some fancies gather a large amount of low quality light ( green ). Brightness is relative. Our brain innately and constantly adjusts levels of brightness to make sense of what it ‘sees’. This is just like the auto exposure control on a camera, except humans do it better and faster. We can observe in the above examples that differences in brightness set up areas of contrast. You might call this ‘brightness contrast’. It’s this effect that can produce a pleasing ‘look’ and the stone will appear to be brilliant to us. Therefore, in our opinion, there are three things that affect our perception of brilliance: 1) Brightness 2) Contrast caused by obscuration 3) Contrast caused by changes in brightness It is not so important to measure brightness but more important to understand that brightness is relative, and if combined with positive obscuration contrast effects and/or positive brightness contrast effects, the stone will appear brilliant. We are defining brilliance as: brightness with positive contrast effects. © 2005 American Gem Society The Illumination of Great Diamond Design The most desirable angular range is 45 to 75 degrees. Why? 1) Because it misses the observer’s head and body. 2) This is where the diamond will most likely find direct sources of illumination. © 2005 American Gem Society Fire The perception of fire is accentuated by the presence of multiple spot light sources. The perception of fire is diminished by the presence of broad diffuse light. © 2005 American Gem Society Since lighting environments change constantly, we measure dispersion. First, we divide the diamond into three zones of equal area: © 2005 American Gem Society Next, we ray traced hundreds of thousands of virtual and wire frame models and averaged the dispersion for each zone at a viewing distance of 25 cm. Here are the dispersion values ( in millimeters ) for the Tolkowsky, Fish Eye and Nail Head stones shown earlier in this presentation. Tolkowsky Fish Eye Nail Head Table 3.7 1.6 0.8 Inner Bezel 2.8 2.7 4.4 Outer Bezel 3.8 2.6 6.0 Average 3.4 2.3 3.7 Finally, we analyzed the data looking for relevance. Indeed, we did find relevance. Industry accepted fine makes produced high values across all three zones while inferior makes suffer in one or more zones. As an aside, we initially looked at the average dispersion across the entire crown. What we found was that a very high reading in one zone could skew the average. We concluded that an entire crown average was useless. Here’s an example: p420t55c385s50lg78 Table 2.1 Inner Bezel 4.0 Outer Bezel 7.0 Average 4.4 © 2005 American Gem Society We postulate that diamonds with high-dispersionaverages across all three zones have the greatest potential to exhibit fire. This becomes more important as viewing distance decreases. We look at fire similarly to contrast in the sense that there are primary (static) and secondary (dynamic) states. © 2005 American Gem Society Leakage In the bulk of our studies, no light was allowed to interact through the pavilion or girdle plane. Or, to state another way, light was only allowed to interact through the crown facets and table. Assumption: small amounts of leakage is essentially inconsequential. Large amounts of leakage, typically occurring in some fancy shapes and some standard round brilliant proportion sets, is detrimental. Leakage is readily quantifiable and can be factored into a grading system. In these color-coded and ray-traced examples, leakage is quantified and shown in white. Fine Make 5.1% Fish Eye 11.0% Nail Head 28.9% It should be noted that leakage is one of the two vehicles whereby brightness contrast effects are produced. The other is the size and distribution of areas that draw light from low angles – the greens in these images. These brightness contrast effects can be positive or negative. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation or Sparkle Here are a couple of definitions of scintillation: GIA Diamond Dictionary, 1977 Edition Scintillation in gemstones can be defined broadly as an alternating display of reflections from the polished facets of a gemstone seen by the observer as either the gemstone, the illuminant or the observer moves; it is a flashing or twinkling of light from the facets. Comparative scintillation, or the degree of scintillation in a diamond, is determined by (1) the number of facets on the stone that will reflect light to the eye as the stone is moved about (i.e., the number of individual reflections), and (2) the quality of the polish of the facets, since the more highly polished the facets, the brighter the reflections and hence the stronger the flashes from them. GIA Diamond Dictionary Online, http://giaonline.gia.edu/public/cgi/as_web.exe?dia_dic.ask+F Flashes of light reflected from a polished diamond, seen when either the diamond, the light source, or the observer moves. Besides diamond's inherent optical properties, scintillation depends on the number and size of the facets, the precision of the facet angles, and the quality of the polish. Sometimes called sparkle. © 2005 American Gem Society Earlier in this presentation we stated that the light/dark areas changed very little over the first 4 to 5 degrees of tilt. Here’s an example: 0 © 2005 American Gem Society 1 2 3 4 5 degrees Let’s put the Tolkowsky model in a lighting environment that allows us to see what happens with fire: 0 1 2 3 4 5 degrees Depending on relative lighting conditions, you may not be able to resolve these as fire, only as a sparkles. That’s because the brightness may be overpowering your ability to discriminate. © 2005 American Gem Society As you can see, the changes are abrupt and dramatic. They occur over very small changes in angular displacement. We believe that any definition of scintillation should include white and colored sparkles. We also believe that fire-in-motion or dynamic fire is a strong component of scintillation. Adding fire-in-motion as a component of scintillation requires that a diamond have a high potential (dispersion) to produce fire in order to generate high scintillation. From a common sense and practical standpoint, this consolidation of white and colored sparkles into the definition of scintillation probably best describes what diamantaires have called ‘life’. We propose the following as a definition of scintillation: The sparkle of white and colored flashes seen as the stone and/or the observer and/or the light source(s) move. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research We continue to research scintillation. Here’s what we believe at this point in time. The trick is in measuring it or creating a metric for it. Scintillation is a function of the double reflection pattern of a faceted diamond. We call these compound mirrors. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research You can change the amount of scintillation in a faceted gemstone in two ways that we know of: 1) Add more facets. 2) Change the size of the facets, thereby changing the compound mirrors. This is an example of adding facets ( facet arrangement on left, compound mirrors image on right): © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research These examples show the compound mirrors for the Tolkowsky proportion set but with changes in the length of the stars and height of the lower girdle facets. 35% Star 60% lower girdle Image 1 © 2005 American Gem Society 50% star 80% lower girdle Image 2 50% star 90% lower girdle Image 3 Scintillation - Continuing Research Image 1 is a classic Old European cut. These stones were known for big, broad flashes of fire with less scintillation than today’s modern round brilliant. Looking at the compound mirrors, you can see why. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research Image 2 is a modern round brilliant. Over time, cutters lengthened the stars and lower girdle facets. The net effect is more scintillation with good perception of fire. Research by scientists at Moscow State University postulate that a well cut stone should have a nice balance of large and small compound mirrors. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research Image 3 shows the effects of too long lower girdle facets. The compound mirrors are similar in size and the lower girdle facets overpower the table area. The net effect is that scintillation may be higher but there is lower dispersion in the outer bezel and contrast is adversely affected. © 2005 American Gem Society Scintillation - Continuing Research With excellent performance to begin with, you might say: Big compound mirrors = big fire but small scintillation Small compound mirrors = small fire but big scintillation. Dynamic contrast + dynamic fire = scintillation. The new AGS Grading System handles scintillation passively, and depending on the outcome of our continuing research, probably sufficiently. Here’s how: if the lower girdle facets get too short, contrast becomes a negative factor. If the lower girdle facets get too long, contrast and dispersion suffer. You probably deduced that it is not necessarily the number of compound mirrors, but the balance and distribution of large and small compound mirrors in any given cut that matters. You may also have speculated that different size compound mirrors may enhance diamonds of different size - .50 ct vs 2.00 ct vs 7.00 ct., for example. This may lead to new faceting arrangements based on physical size. © 2005 American Gem Society Weight Ratio or ‘Spread’ ‘Spread’ is an industry term that refers to a diamond’s face up size compared to its weight. You can also call this ‘weight ratio’ or ‘millimeter footprint versus weight’. The classic example is that a fine make 1.00 carat round brilliant cut diamond should have a ‘spread’ of about 6.5 millimeters. Naturally, you would want to purchase the largest millimeter stone that weighs the least amount and still performs. Why pay for unwanted weight? For a one-carat diamond, the current AGS Ideal 0 proportions allow a millimeter ‘spread’ range of 6.30 to 6.57 mm. © 2005 American Gem Society Most people would not consider a 1.00 carat round brilliant cut diamond with a ‘spread’ of 6.30 millimeters to be an Ideal. Therefore, we are using a 5% ‘spread’ factor for the round brilliant in our new grading system. We are normalizing to the Tolkowsky cut with a 2.7% girdle thickness at the mains and 1% at the scallops. This Tolkowsky model will weigh 1.00 carat at 6.47 millimeters in diameter. A tight ‘spread’ tolerance is a beautiful thing because it self corrects a lot of cutting faults. Cutters know how to ‘swindle’ our existing proportion sets to maximize weight at the expense of beauty. We hope that the ‘spread’ component will go a long way in furthering the world diamond community’s and consumer’s perception of fine make. It’s also reasonable in today’s world of precision diamond cutting. Lastly, it’s easy to teach and understand. © 2005 American Gem Society Indexing the Upper Half Facets on a Round Brilliant Cut ‘Normal’ cutting produces equal girdle thickness at the junction of the mains and the half facets. © 2005 American Gem Society Indexing the Upper Half Facets Cutting the upper halves on a non-normal index results in girdle thickness that is different at the halves than at the mains. Example 1 Thicker at Mains © 2005 American Gem Society Example 2 Thicker at Halves Indexing the Upper Half Facets Example 1 can result in better weight retention but at the expense of optical performance. AGS ASET ‘Hearts & Arrows’ © 2005 American Gem Society Brightness simulation Fire Scope Indexing the Upper Half Facets Example 2 can result in less weight retention but face up leakage is eliminated. AGS ASET ‘Hearts & Arrows’ © 2005 American Gem Society Brightness simulation Fire Scope Indexing the Upper Half Facets Example 1 can be an AGS 0 in our existing system. It will not be an AGS 0 in our new system. Example 2 can be an AGS 0 in either system. The AGS ASET provides, at a glance, much more information than other types of viewers. A complete article on this topic is included on this CDRom disk. © 2005 American Gem Society Tilt George Kaplan wrote a letter to Gems and Gemology and it was published in the Summer 2002 issue. In that article he made a case for the concept of the ‘Cone of Beauty’. He said that a well made round brilliant can stand a larger amount of tilt before the girdle is reflected in the table of the stone. As an example, his firm cut two identical diamonds except one had a 55% table and the other a 65% table. With a tilt of 10 degrees, the 65% table stone started to show dull girdle reflections in the table. On the other hand, the 55% table handled a tilt of 18 degrees. Therefore, he said that the 65% table stone had a ‘Cone of Beauty’ of 20 degrees. The 55% table stone had a ‘Cone of Beauty’ of 36 degrees. We support George Kaplan’s astute observation and think it should be part of our new grading system. It’s another factor that helps to separate fine makes from inferior makes. It’s also another factor that adds to the concept of an Ideal. © 2005 American Gem Society Tilt Examples It’s easy to make tilt charts for the standard round brilliant. We started with the Tolkowsky model and verified what it looked like at 18 degrees of tilt. In order to build a grading system, we needed to ‘relax’ that number while still maintaining the same ‘look’. 14 degrees of tilt seems to be realistic. Tolkowsky @18 degrees of tilt 59 table at 14 degrees of tilt. Girdle reflection shown in green © 2005 American Gem Society Tilt Charts © 2005 American Gem Society Table % Minimum Pavilion Angle 47 39.0 48 39.1 49 39.2 50 39.4 51 39.5 52 39.6 53 39.7 54 39.9 55 40.0 56 40.1 57 40.2 58 40.4 59 40.5 60 40.6 61 40.7 62 40.9 63 41.0 64 41.1 65 41.3 66 41.4 67 41.5 68 41.6 69 41.7 70 41.9 Girdle Thickness Our research has shown that the only good things about a girdle are: 1) it defines the shape of the stone. 2) if it is sufficiently thick, it helps to prevent chipping. Other than that, the girdle is an area that allows detrimental infiltration and leakage of light. Here are color-coded, face up simulations of the Tolkowsky model and photo real simulations of their profiles. very thin © 2005 American Gem Society thin medium sl. thick thick very thick ex. thick Taste With respect to the standard round brilliant, the three areas of taste are: Table reflection Width of Pavilion Main facets Table Size © 2005 American Gem Society Some fancy shapes can offer a wide variety of equal performance with different ‘looks’. Here are some Princess cuts. 55% Table 65% Table 70% Table The new AGS grading system allows for taste factors. © 2005 American Gem Society Insights Gained Using the AGS ASET Why Older Cuts Have Short Star Facets Before the invention of the diamond saw, the diamond’s table was fashioned by grinding away one of the points on an octahedron. In order to save weight, small table sizes were the rule. © 2005 American Gem Society Insights Gained Using the AGS ASET Cutters are very, very smart. These ASET images show you why cutters shortened the star length when making older cuts. P410t47c358s50lg60 Crown ASET Brightness Sim Profile It’s readily apparent that the 50% star length makes the upper halves too steep. Performance suffers. © 2005 American Gem Society Insights Gained Using the AGS ASET See what happens when the star facets are shortened to 35%: P410t47c358s35lg60 Crown ASET Brightness Sim Profile Shorter star facet length lowers the angle of the halves so they draw light from the red area. Performance is greatly improved. In this case, looking at the past helps to validate the present. © 2005 American Gem Society Lower Girdle Height We measure lower girdle length by height. This is the same as the OctoNus DiamCalc software. GIA measures lower girdle length by radius. That way you can measure it with a table gauge. It can cause confusion because the two aren’t identical. © 2005 American Gem Society Lower Girdle Height – AGS / DiamCalc to GIA Conversion Chart Special thanks to Bruce Harding and Jason Quick © 2005 American Gem Society Lower Girdle Height – GIA to AGS / DiamCalc Conversion Chart Special thanks to Bruce Harding and Jason Quick © 2005 American Gem Society Foundation Summary • Studied the effects of an observer, surrounding environment, and lighting. • Studied how humans ‘see’ our world. • Developed metrics that reflect actual observation. • Invented new tools. • Proposed new definitions. • New system is three-dimensional in nature. © 2005 American Gem Society Research Results © 2005 American Gem Society The Round Brilliant • Tolkowsky’s Five Diamonds Stone 1 Stone 2 Stone 3 Stone 4 Stone 5 Average Theoretical Diameter 7.00 7.08 6.50 21.07 9.12 Depth 4.12 4.35 3.61 12.34 5.47 Pavilion Angle 40.75° 40.75° 40° 41° 41° 40.7 40.75 Pavilion Depth % 43.0 42.8 42.1 42.8 42.2 42.6 43.1 Crown Angle 35° 35° 34.5° 33° 34° 34.3 34.5 Crown Height % 15.7 18.6 13.3 15.7 17.8 16.2 16.2 Girdle Thickness v. thin v. thin v. thin v. thin v.thin Est. Table % 55 47 61 52 47 Est. Weight 1.23 1.31 .94 33.26 2.77 © 2005 American Gem Society Their Appearance with 50% Star Length, 80% Lower Girdle Height 1 2 3 4 5 © 2005 American Gem Society Conjecture • If Tolkowsky had the tools we have, he might have picked this one for his Stone #3: • P411t61c329s50lg80 © 2005 American Gem Society Why Now? • Fast computers, accurate measuring devices, ray tracing software, OctoNus DiamCalc software. • Advanced science and technology allows us to grade the diamond in three-dimensional space rather than two-dimensionally. © 2005 American Gem Society Explanation of Charts • In case it’s hard to read them, the following charts are set up in the following manner: • Pavilion angle is 43 degrees in the top left corner and descends in 0.2 degree increments to 39.8 degrees in the bottom left corner. • Crown angle starts at 29 degrees in the top left corner and increases in 0.2 degree increments to 40 degrees in the top right corner. • The charts are for a 6 millimeter diameter stone, 50% star length, 80% lower girdle height, and a 3.5% girdle thickness at the mains. © 2005 American Gem Society Findings • Combined overlays: • Tilt, Weight Ratio, Contrast, Durability • You’ll notice that we’ve defined an area for potential 0’s for a 55% table without knowing anything about brightness, dispersion, or leakage. © 2005 American Gem Society Defining the New AGS 0 • The previous chart with the candidates for a 55% Table. © 2005 American Gem Society Candidates • The reason we use the word ‘candidates’ is because the entire system is dynamic. For example, contrast changes with size. • The boundary edges are ‘fuzzy’ in the sense that a cutter can bring a borderline stone into a higher category by adjusting star length and lower girdle heights. A cutter can also adjust girdle thickness to bring some stones into a higher grade if its grade is being reduced by the weight ratio factor. • You can also lower a candidate through sloppy cutting or indexing the facets, especially the upper girdle facets. • To consistently produce a desired cut grade, cutters will have to cut to ‘fat’ portions of the charts. © 2005 American Gem Society Round Brilliant Cutting Guideline Charts for Table Sizes 47 through 70% All of the following charts are included on this CDRom disk © 2005 American Gem Society © 2005 American Gem Society © 2005 American Gem Society © 2005 American Gem Society © 2005 American Gem Society Special thanks to Jake Sheffield for the charts © 2005 American Gem Society The Old and the New • 55% Table • The steep pavilion - steep crown and the shallow pavilion - shallow crown corners of our existing two-dimensional system will no longer be AGS Ideal 0’s. © 2005 American Gem Society Star Length • This chart shows the effects of changing the star length for a 6mm round brilliant, cut normally with a 55% table: • Shortening the stars to 40% increases the candidates by almost 25%. • Lengthening the stars to 60% reduces the candidates by over 75%. © 2005 American Gem Society Lower Girdle Height • This chart shows the effects of changing the lower girdle height for a 6mm round brilliant, cut normally with a 55% table: • • Shortening the lower girdle facets to 75% decreases the candidates by about 75%. By increasing the lower girdle facets height to 85%, the number of candidates remains about the same, but shifts slightly up and to the left. © 2005 American Gem Society Opportunities • Candidates in new table sizes. • Better weight retention and weight ratio options. © 2005 American Gem Society What’s Ahead • More research for smaller diamonds – Diamonds under 15 points not eligible for grading • Commercial and Industrial AGS Software – Batch processing with industrial version © 2005 American Gem Society The Princess Cut • Our new methodology will enable us to develop cut grading systems for any shape and facet arrangement. © 2005 American Gem Society Configuration • New grading system for square princess cuts – Bezel Corner – French Corner Bezel Corner - 45 Facets © 2005 American Gem Society French Corner - 41 Facets Complexity • Princess cut more complex – Two pavilion main angles and two crown main angles. – Increases combinations exponentially. Not really exponentially, but a whole lot. ‘Exponentially’ sounds better than ‘a whole lot’ and I couldn’t think of a better word. © 2005 American Gem Society Example © 2005 American Gem Society Versatility • Very wide range of table sizes. • When tilted, girdle reflections under the table are broken up into small pieces. © 2005 American Gem Society Top Performers • These charts are for a 6 millimeter square with 2 rows of chevron shaped facets on the pavilion. © 2005 American Gem Society Macro Chart All of the macro Square Princess Guidelines Charts are included on this CDRom disk. © 2005 American Gem Society 55 Appearance © 2005 American Gem Society 55 Cutting Suggestion © 2005 American Gem Society Micro View of 55 Table Guideline Chart © 2005 American Gem Society 60 Appearance © 2005 American Gem Society 60 Cutting Suggestion © 2005 American Gem Society Micro View of 60 Table Guideline Chart © 2005 American Gem Society 65 Appearance © 2005 American Gem Society 65 Cutting Suggestion © 2005 American Gem Society Micro View of 65 Table Guideline Chart © 2005 American Gem Society 70 Appearance © 2005 American Gem Society 70 Cutting Suggestion © 2005 American Gem Society Micro View of 70 Table Guideline Chart © 2005 American Gem Society 75 Appearance © 2005 American Gem Society 75 Cutting Suggestion © 2005 American Gem Society Micro View of 75 Table Guideline Chart © 2005 American Gem Society Top Performer Distribution By Table Size © 2005 American Gem Society AGS Grade Distribution © 2005 American Gem Society Application / Methodology The New AGS Cut Grade System © 2005 American Gem Society Introduction • Software driven system. • Combination of deduction and net lowering categories. • Complex set of criteria is evaluated to establish a grade. © 2005 American Gem Society Expression • Same AGS cut grade format. • Modified sub-categories. Cut Grade Light Performance Proportion Factors Finish © 2005 American Gem Society AGS Ideal 0 0 0 0 Sub-Category 1 • Light Performance – – – – Brightness Dispersion Leakage Contrast © 2005 American Gem Society What’s Going On Inside the AGS Software? • The following slides will simulate grading for a Round Brilliant Cut diamond with a 55% Table, 50% star length and 80% lower girdle height © 2005 American Gem Society Brightness Deduction Charts • Face up, tilted 15 degrees and overlay © 2005 American Gem Society Dispersion Deduction Charts • Face up, tilted 15 degrees and overlay © 2005 American Gem Society Leakage Deduction Charts • Face up, tilted 15 degrees and overlay © 2005 American Gem Society Contrast Deduction Chart • 30 degree obscuration, 40 degree obscuration and overlay © 2005 American Gem Society Overlay Result • The 55% table round brilliant cut diamond must fall within the white area of this chart to be an AGS Zero candidate © 2005 American Gem Society Sub-Category 2 • Proportion Factors – Girdle Thickness – Culet Size – Weight ratio or millimeter footprint versus weight or ‘spread’ – Durability ( Crown Angles less than 30 degrees ) – Tilt ( at what point does the girdle reflect under the table ) © 2005 American Gem Society New Girdle Thickness Chart* © 2013 American Gem Society * Reflects AGS Diamond Grading Standards Change Effective May 1, 2013 Net Lowering Chart Culet Size – same as before Culet Size AGS Grade Pointed, Very small, Small, 0 Medium Slightly large 1 3 Large Very large 5 Extremely large 7,8,9,10 © 2005 American Gem Society Weight Ratio Deduction Chart © 2005 American Gem Society Durability Deduction Chart © 2005 American Gem Society Durability Traditionally the industry discounts diamonds with extremely thin and very thin girdles. We also do the same. The other durability factor that we do not address is shallow crown angles. Industry wisdom says that a diamond with crown angles under 30 degrees is more likely to break under normal wear and tear. GIA currently issues a statement on its reports if the crown angle is less than 30 degrees. We’ll address shallow crown angles in our new system. Here’s an example of a round brilliant with high, but not the highest performance and crown angles of less than 30 degrees: © 2005 American Gem Society p416t55c296s50lg78 Tilt Deduction Chart 55% Table © 2005 American Gem Society Sub-Category 3 • Finish – Polish – Symmetry © 2005 American Gem Society Net Lowering Chart* • Polish and Symmetry The AGS Ideal® (0) Cut grade is attainable with Ideal or Excellent polish and symmetry grades as follows: AGS Ideal® (0) Cut Light Performance / Proportion Factors Ideal (0) Ideal (0) Ideal (0) Ideal (0) Grade Polish Ideal (0) Excellent (1) Ideal (0) Excellent (1) AGS Excellent (1) Cut Grade Light Performance / Polish Proportion Factors Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Very Good (2) Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Very Good (2) Symmetry Ideal (0) Ideal (0) Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Numeric Designator 0 0 0 The Triple Zero® 010 001 011 Symmetry Excellent (1) Excellent (1) Very Good (2) Very Good (2) Numeric Designator 111 121 112 122 This Cut Grade model continues for Very Good, Good, and so forth. © 2012 American Gem Society * Reflects AGS Diamond Grading Standards Change Effective November 15, 2012 Deduction vs. Net Lowering • Cumulative deductions – Brightness, Dispersion, Leakage, Contrast, Durability, Weight Ratio, and Tilt – Add them up or sum them. I.e. 1+1+1 = 3 • Net lowering deductions – Girdle Thickness, Culet Size, Polish and Symmetry – They only lower the cut grade if lower than the sum of the deductions • Software performs calculations © 2005 American Gem Society Length-to-Width Ratio We have had much discussion on what length-to-width ratios should be included in our new system. The existing AGS Diamond Standards specify acceptable length-to-width ratios for various fancy shapes. Here are the ratios for some fancy shapes: Oval length to width range: 1.33 to 1.66 © 2005 American Gem Society Length-to-Width Ratio Emerald Cut length to width range: 1.50 to 1.75 © 2005 American Gem Society Length-to-Width Ratio Marquise length to width range: 1.75 to 2.25 © 2005 American Gem Society Length-to-Width Ratio Pear length to width range: 1.5 to 1.75 © 2005 American Gem Society How Do I Cut Grade a Diamond? • Step by step demonstration. • Mostly software automated. © 2005 American Gem Society Step One • Measure the diamond with a machine. • Create a three-dimensional model. • Does require a hardware investment. © 2005 American Gem Society Step Two • Import three-dimensional image into AGS Software and ray trace. Pavilion angles 40.75 Crown angles 34.5 Table 53 Star Length 50% Lower girdle 78% T I Dispersion T value Dispersion I value 1.0 21.2 1.0 19.9 O Dispersion 1.0 O value 27.4 15 degree 15 degree T 15 degree 15 degree I 15 degree I O 15 degree Dispersion T value Dispersion value Dispersion O value 0.9 21.9 1.3 22.9 1.0 19.0 Blues 21.2 Reds 66.2 Greens 7.2 Leakage 5.4 Blues 11.4 Reds 64.9 Greens 18.5 Leakage 5.2 • Optical performance is measured. © 2005 American Gem Society Step Three • Software will compare values and assign a deduction grade. • Software will compare values to net lowering categories and adjust. • Grader inputs polish and symmetry grades, verifies girdle thickness and culet size. • Software assigns light performance portion of final cut grade. © 2005 American Gem Society Don’t I Get To Do Anything? • Check or verify girdle thickness and culet size. • Evaluate polish and symmetry. • You may have to assess contrast on some fancy shapes. © 2005 American Gem Society Easy as 1, 2, 3 • The new AGS Cut Grading System is the most sophisticated system ever developed. • Even so, it is the easiest AGS system to use – ever. • Most importantly, the methodology can be applied to any shape and facet arrangement. © 2005 American Gem Society Wait, There’s More • Research on rectangular Princess Cuts and impact of more ‘chevron’ shaped facets. • Results in very near future. © 2005 American Gem Society Afraid of Diamond Commodities? Let’s Revisit ‘Taste’ • Most of us probably feel that a diamond commodity is a bad thing. • Some are afraid that this new grading system will make diamond a commodity. • The research only quantifies what experienced people already know. • You and your expertise are still the most important part of a diamond sale. • Let’s look at some examples of different AGS Grades and you decide for yourself. • The following examples have 50% star length and 80% lower girdle height. © 2005 American Gem Society Afraid of Diamond Commodities? AGS 4 Cut Grade • P410t65c298 © 2005 American Gem Society P426t51c324 Afraid of Diamond Commodities? AGS 3 Cut Grade • P418t49c338 © 2005 American Gem Society P416t68c304 Afraid of Diamond Commodities? AGS 2 Cut Grade • P400t55c382 © 2005 American Gem Society P412t63c302 Afraid of Diamond Commodities? AGS 1 Cut Grade • P412t58c322 © 2005 American Gem Society P402t55c372 Afraid of Diamond Commodities? AGS 0 Cut Grade • P418t47c338 © 2005 American Gem Society P412t61c328 Afraid of Diamond Commodities? Conclusion In this case, seeing is believing. I submit that the new AGS Grading System does more to keep diamonds from becoming a commodity than anything else others have proposed. I believe that the cutting community is looking at vast and broad opportunities because of the new AGS system. You are empowered by knowing that equivalent grades are equivalent in performance but different in look ( taste ). You can empower your customer, get them into your store, and make more sales by asking them what their taste is in an Ideal, or a Very Good, or a Good cut. The new AGS Cut system will serve you well, if you learn it. The ball’s in your court. © 2005 American Gem Society Thank You! Special thanks to JCK and all involved in this historic project © 2005 American Gem Society