According to the diamond grading department at Tiffany & Co., the 1.66 carat, G-color, SI-1 clarity.

What is the best Colour in diamond?

D color diamond is the highest grade and is extremely rare—the highest color grade that money can buy. Eight percent of customers choose a D color diamond.

Are Tiffany diamonds blue?

Blue diamonds are among the rarest colored diamonds in nature. This exceptional blue diamond was chosen by Tiffany & Co. as a “stone of distinction,” masterfully cut to maximize its inherent beauty.

Are Tiffany diamonds really better?

Tiffany does boast that they grade their diamonds better than GIA, but the fact is, GIA has the highest reputation when it comes to diamond gemological reporting. When purchasing a diamond, it is important to understand what you want to get out of it, and if quality diamonds and craftsmanship is part of it.

Are all Tiffany diamonds Triple Excellent?

What Impacts Diamond Cut Quality? The highest cut grade in the industry, triple excellent, is given to a diamond with an “excellent” rating in precision of cut, symmetry and polish. All Tiffany individually registered, white round brilliant engagement diamonds and Tiffany True® diamonds have a triple excellent cut.

Are all Tiffany diamonds GIA certified?

Tiffany does utilize GIA Standards, but they say they tighten them up. All Tiffany Diamonds are Cut to “Excellent” Precision (equal to GIA’s Excellent Grades).

What is the best diamond Colour and clarity?

According to that GIA standard, the “best” diamond color is D. (Read more about D color diamonds here.) D color diamonds are the equivalent of IF or FL grade diamonds on the clarity scale — they’re very rare, and their price definitely reflects that.

Is Tiffany blue and turquoise the same color?

The main difference is that tiffany blue is slightly darker and on the blue side of the color spectrum where as turquoise is slightly lighter and on the green side of the spectrum.

Are Tiffany blood diamonds?

So the Tiffany Diamond may not technically be a blood diamond according to the U.N., But this is a definition that deserves to be expanded, as Washington Post opinion columnist Karen Attiah noted.