Because diamonds are so valuable, it’s essential
to have a universal grading system for comparing their
quality. In the 1940s and ’50s, GIA developed
the 4Cs and the GIA International Diamond Grading
System™ to objectively compare and evaluate
diamonds.
• Carat
• Color
• Clarity
• Cut
Diamonds and other gemstones are weighed in metric carats:
one carat is equal to 0.2 grams, about the same weight
as a paperclip. (Don’t confuse carat with karat,
as in “18K gold,” which refers to gold purity.)
Just as a dollar is divided into 100 pennies, a carat
is divided into 100 points. For example, a 50-point
diamond weighs 0.50 carats. But two diamonds of equal
weight can have very different values depending on the
other members of the Four C’s: clarity, color
and cut. The majority of diamonds used in fine jewelry
weigh one carat or less.
Because even a fraction of a carat can make a considerable
difference in cost, precision is crucial. In the diamond
industry, weight is often measured to the hundred thousandths
of a carat, and rounded to a hundredth of a carat. Diamond
weights greater than one carat are expressed in carats
and decimals. (For instance, a 1.08 ct. stone would
be described as “one point oh eight carats,”
or “one oh eight.”)
HOW DID THE CARAT SYSTEM START?
The carat, the standard unit of weight for diamonds
and other gemstones, takes its name from the carob seed.
Because these small seeds had a fairly uniform weight,
early gem traders used them as counterweights in their
balance scales. The modern metric carat, equal to 0.2
grams, was adopted by the United States in 1913 and
other countries soon after. Today, a carat weighs exactly
the same in every corner of the world. |