The present invention relates to a cut of diamond, and in particular to a cut of diamond having an oval girdle that emits an enhanced brilliancy of reflection lights.
As a cut of diamond, a round brilliant cut is generally used. A round brilliant cut diamond has a table facet of a regular octagon on a top of a crown, and eight crown main facets, eight star facets and sixteen upper girdle facets on an outer circumference of the crown between the table facet and a girdle. The diamond further has a culet at an apex below the girdle, and eight pavilion main facets and sixteen lower girdle facets on an outer circumference of a pavilion between the culet and the girdle. So, the round brilliant cut is generally called a 58-facet solid, including the table facet and the culet. And, the round brilliant cut is eight times symmetrical with respect to a central axis.
The present inventors introduced “amount of visual-perceptible reflection rays” for a round brilliant cut diamond, invented a cut design of the diamond enhancing the amount of visual-perceptible reflection rays to evaluate brilliancy that people can perceive when they observe diamonds, and applied it for patent. That has been published as Patent Document 1.
In the above-mentioned patent application about a round brilliant cut diamond, amount of physical reflection rays was obtained in such a manner that meshes are defined by dividing the radius of the diamond into 100 equal segments and the ray density was obtained with respect to each mesh. Since the radius of diamonds is several millimeters, a mesh is an area of several hundred square micrometers. By considering an area perceptible by human eyes, amounts of visual-perceptible reflection rays were obtained by calculating a square root of values of tenths of the amount of physical reflection rays with respect to patterns having areas larger than 30 meshes among patterns of reflection rays from a diamond, and the sum of the amounts of visual-perceptible reflection rays was obtained with respect to all the patterns. That is, the amount of visual-perceptible reflection rays =Σ{(the amount of physical reflection rays with respect to patterns of 30 meshes or more in each segment)/10}1/2.
When people observe a diamond above a table facet of the diamond, light coming from a back of the observer is obstructed by him and does not reach the diamond. On the other hand, light coming with a large angle is not so effective for reflection rays. So, in the previous patent application, light coming into a diamond with an angle of 20 degrees to 45 degrees with a vertical line connecting a center of the table facet to a culet was treated as an effective light, amount of reflection rays due to the incident light within the angle range is called “amount of effective visual-perceptible reflection rays”, and a cut design to enhance the amount of effective visual-perceptible reflection rays was also discussed.
Although the amount of effective visual-perceptible reflection rays is effective for a study of reflection rays from a diamond when an incident light uniformly comes around the diamond, it is necessary that strength of the incident light is expressed by using cos 2θ, in which θ is incident angle of the incident light, when the light comes from a flat ceiling.
There is an oval-cut diamond having an oval girdle as a modification of the round brilliant cut. The oval-cut diamond has a crown above a girdle, a pavilion below the girdle and a table facet on a top of the crown. An oval-cut diamond that is not symmetrical with respect to a central axis is usually used.
The oval-cut diamond that is not symmetrical with respect to a central axis has a poor brilliancy of reflection rays. Also, there is a round brilliant cut flatly deformed in a breadth wise or a lengthwise direction. For example, refer to Non-Patent Document 1.
The oval-cut diamond has a girdle in an oval shape, a crown provided above the girdle and having a table facet on a top of it and a pavilion below the girdle. The crown and the pavilion in the oval brilliant cut are deformed, following a replacement of a round girdle in a round brilliant cut to an oval girdle. Namely, in the pavilion of the oval brilliant cut there are eight pavilion main facets converging on a culet from crossing points of the oval girdle with long axes and short axes of the girdle and bisectors dividing the angle between the long axis and the short axis equally into two. The pavilion has sixteen lower girdle facets, almost in an oval sector or a triangle, each is a bisection made from a portion surrounded by neighboring pavilion main facets and the girdle. In the oval-cut diamond described in Non-Patent Document 1, a pavilion angle (an angle between a pavilion main facet and a table facet) of pavilion main facets on the short axis side becomes larger than a pavilion angle of pavilion main facets positioned on the long axis side, and a pavilion angle of pavilion main facets in the midpoint between the long axis and the short axis is intermediate between their pavilion angles. In the same manner, an angle of lower girdle facets on the long axis side with the table facet becomes larger than an angle of lower girdle facets on the short axis side with the table facet.
On the other hand, in the crown, vertexes on the long axis side among the vertexes of the octagonal table facet are shifted outside, and vertexes on the short axis side among the vertexes of the octagonal table facet are shifted inside so that the octagonal table facet is lengthened a little in the long axis direction, and lengths in a radial direction and crown angles of crown main facets (it may be called “bezel facet” sometimes) are made equal for all.
As a result of it, the oval brilliant cut diamond is almost equal among the eight crown angles and different among the eight pavilion angles. Also, an angle of each of the sixteen lower girdle facets with the table facet is different among them. Since the pavilion angle of the pavilion main facets on the long axis side is smaller, but the pavilion angle of the pavilion main facets on the short axis side is larger, the pavilion main facet positioned in the midpoint between the long axis and the short axis cannot be directed in a direction of the central axis. Since the diamond has different pavilion angles, different lower girdle facet angles and facets not directed in the central axis direction as explained above, lights reflected on the pavilion main facets and the lower girdle facets and light patterns appearing on these facets are not uniform, because reflection light directions from the facets are not the same, and they are difficult to identify because of extremely fine reflection patterns. Also, the brilliancy on the crown facets and the table facet is very poor.
The present inventors have obtained reflection ray amount based on “the amounts of visual-perceptible reflection rays” introduced in the above-mentioned patent application. An arithmetic mean of “an amount of effective visual-perceptible reflection rays” obtained by an incident light of 20 degrees to 45 degrees and “an amount of visual-perceptible reflection rays” obtained from incident light strength modified by using cos 2θ of incident angle θ of an incident light is referred to as “reflection evaluation index”. An oval-cut having an enhanced brilliancy of reflection light has been studied, using the reflection evaluation index.
Therefore, an object of the present invention is to provide an oval-cut diamond having an enhanced brilliancy of reflection lights on observing above a table of the diamond.
An oval-cut diamond according to the present invention comprises a columnar girdle, a crown provided above the girdle and having an octagonal table facet on a top of the crown and a pavilion provided below the girdle, and the girdle has an upper ridge between the crown and the girdle and a lower ridge between the pavilion and the girdle. A contour line of a girdle cross-section, parallel to the table facet, is in an oval or oval-like shape. The diamond has a central plane containing a long axis of the contour line and being a plane vertical to the table facet, a straight central axis on the central plane crossing vertically the table facet at a center of the long axis of the contour line of the girdle cross-section, a circumscribed circle having a center on the central axis and circumscribing the contour line at at least one end of the long axis of the contour line, eight-dividing planes composed of the central plane, a plane containing a short axis of the contour line of the girdle cross-section and the central axis and planes dividing an angle around the central axis between the plane containing the short axis and the central axis and the central plane equally into two and second eight-dividing planes dividing an angle around the central axis between two neighboring eight-dividing planes.
The table facet has two opposite vertexes on the central plane and six vertexes symmetrical with respect to the central plane.
The crown has eight tetragonal crown main facets, eight triangular star facets and sixteen upper girdle facets on a diamond circumference between the girdle upper ridge and the table facet. Each of the crown main facets is a tetragon having two opposite vertexes composed of a point, at which each of the eight-dividing planes crosses the girdle upper ridge, and each vertex of the table facet, and other vertexes each owned jointly with each of two other crown main facets neighboring on the crown main facet. Each of the star facets is a triangle having a bottom side coinciding with each side of the table facet and an opposite vertex coinciding with each of the other vertexes jointly owned by two neighboring crown main facets each having a vertex at each end of the bottom side. Each of the upper girdle facets is a triangle or an oval sector having a bottom side coinciding with a side, whose end is on the girdle upper ridge, among sides of the crown main facets and a vertex on the girdle upper ridge.
The pavilion has a bottom apex at a lower end of the central axis, and eight pavilion main facets and sixteen lower girdle facets on the diamond circumference between the bottom apex and the girdle lower ridge. Each of the pavilion main facets is a tetragon or a part of a tetragon extending from the bottom apex toward a crossing point of each of the second eight-dividing planes with the girdle lower ridge on the diamond circumference between the bottom apex and the girdle lower ridge, and having a side, whose end coincides with the bottom apex, jointly owned with each of two other pavilion main facets neighboring on the pavilion main facet. Each of the pavilion main facets is formed with opposite vertexes composed of a crossing point of each of the second eight-dividing planes with the circumscribed circle and the bottom apex. Each of the lower girdle facets is formed between the pavilion main facets and the girdle lower ridge. Each of the lower girdle facet is a triangle or an oval sector having a bottom side coinciding with a side having an end on the girdle lower ridge among sides of each of the pavilion main facets and a vertex on the girdle lower ridge. And, each of the lower girdle facets is disposed on each of both sides of each of the pavilion main facets.
The oval or oval-like shape formed by the contour line of the girdle cross-section has a ratio of a short radius to a long radius (b/a) of 0.6 or more, in which a radius in a long axis direction of the shape (hereinafter, referred to as “long radius”) is denoted as “a”, and a radius in a short axis direction of the shape (hereinafter, referred to as “short radius”) is denoted as “b”.
Further, each of the pavilion main facets may have a substantially equal pavilion angle with the table facet. In the case, it is preferable that each pair of pairs of pavilion main facets, of which each pair is composed of two pavilion main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis, and the table facet have a common plane vertical to all of them within them, and that each pair of pairs of crown main facets, of which each pair is composed of two crown main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis, and the table facet have a common plane vertical to all of them within them.
And, it is preferable that the crown main facets have substantially equal crown angles with the table facet.
Further, it is preferable that a pavilion angle to the table facet each of the pavilion main facets has and a crown angle to the table facet each of the crown main facets has are in a region surrounded by lines connecting points (p, c): (43 degrees, 10 degrees), (41 degrees, 14 degrees), (37 degrees, 23 degrees), (35 degrees, 33 degrees), (35 degrees, 36 degrees), (37 degrees, 42 degrees), (39 degrees, 42 degrees), (41 degrees, 36 degrees), (43 degrees, 24degrees) and (44.7 degrees, 9 degrees) on a graph drawn with pavilion angles (p) in a vertical line and crown angles (c) in a horizontal line.
Also, it is preferable that the girdle has a substantially equal girdle height around a whole circumference of the girdle, and that facets in the pavilion excluding lower girdle facets neighboring on the long axis have adjusting facets between a respective facet and the girdle lower ridge having a larger angle to the table facet than the pavilion angle and forming a ridge between the respective facet and each of the adjusting facets.
In the oval-cut diamond of the present invention, it is preferable that the central axis of the diamond passes a center of the long axis of the contour line of the girdle cross-section.
In the oval-cut diamond of the present invention, it is preferable that the contour line of the girdle cross-section parallel to the table is oval.
And, the present invention can be applied to a diamond called “marquise” that has a contour line in a shape of two oval sectors (or circle sectors that are a kind of oval sectors) crossing each other on a girdle cross-section parallel to the table facet.
Further, the present invention can be applied to a diamond called “pear-shape” that has a contour line in a shape of three oval sectors (or circle sectors that are a kind of oval sectors) crossing each other on a girdle cross-section parallel to the table facet.
The oval-cut diamond according to the present invention exhibits an enhanced brilliancy of reflection lights when observed above the table. The brilliancy has been improved by about 200 to 300% in comparison with that of a diamond flatly deformed in a breadth wise or a lengthwise direction from a round brilliant cut. Also, a girdle height can be substantially equal around the whole girdle circumference so that a good appearance can be obtained.
100, 200, 300: oval-cut diamond
110, 210, 310: girdle
120: crown
122: table facet
126: crown main facet
132: star facet
136: upper girdle facet
140, 340: pavilion
142, 144, 342, 344: pavilion main facet
152, 352: lower girdle facet
162, 362: bottom apex
170: eight-dividing plane
180′, 180″: second eight-dividing plane
394, 398a, 398b, 398c: adjusting facet
398: ridge
The present invention is described below in detail with reference to EXAMPLES.
An oval-cut diamond according to the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings showing EXAMPLE 1.
An oval brilliant cut diamond comprises a girdle having an oval cross-section, a crown provided above the girdle and having a table facet on a top of the crown, and a pavilion provided below the girdle. The girdle has an upper ridge between the crown and the girdle and a lower ridge between the pavilion and the girdle. The crown and the pavilion in the oval brilliant cut diamond are shaped to have an oval girdle replacing a round girdle in a round brilliant cut diamond.
As is apparent from
For convenience in the following descriptions, a plane that contains a long axis of the contour line of the girdle cross-section and is vertical to the table facet is a central plane, a straight line on the central plane crossing vertically the table facet 122 at the midpoint of the long axis of the contour line, that is, a center of the octagonal table facet 122 is a central axis, which is a z-axis. An origin point of the z-axis is on an upper cross-section of the girdle, that is, a cross-section between the crown and the girdle. From the origin point, an x-axis is drawn in a long axis direction of the girdle, and a y-axis is drawn in a short axis of the girdle. Then, bisectors are drawn dividing angles between the long axis and the short axis substantially equally into two. Planes containing the central axis (the z-axis) and extending in directions of the x-axis, the bisectors, and the y-axis are called eight-dividing planes 170. Planes dividing an angle around the central axis (the z-axis) between neighboring eight-dividing planes 170 equally into two are called second eight-dividing planes. Among the second eight-dividing planes, planes between the x-axis and the bisectors are second eight-dividing planes 180′, and planes between the bisectors and the y-axis are second eight-dividing plane 180″.
With reference to
The two opposite vertexes 123 of the table facet 122 are at a substantially equal distance from the central axis (the z-axis) in the x-axis direction (the long axis direction) on the central plane, and the two opposite vertexes 124 are at a substantially equal distance from the central axis in the y-axis direction (the short axis direction), and other four vertexes 125 are positioned at a substantially equal distance from the central axis in directions of the bisectors dividing the angle between the long axis and the short axis equally into two, though not always on the bisectors.
Each of the crown main facets 126 is a tetragon having two opposite vertexes 127 and 123, 129 and 125, or 128 and 124 composed of points 127, 129 and 128, at which each of the eight-dividing planes 170 crosses the upper ridge of the girdle 10, and vertexes 123, 125 and 124 of the table facet 122, and other vertexes 121 each owned jointly with each of two neighboring crown main facets 126. Each of the crown main facets 126 crosses vertically each of the eight-dividing planes. The eight crown main facets preferably have an equal angle (crown angle (c)) with the table facet.
The crown main facets 126 are formed so that planes crossing vertically the eight-dividing planes and having an equal angle with the table facet pass each vertex of the table facet. Points at which intersecting lines of the planes with the eight-dividing planes cross the girdle can be vertexes of the crown main facets on the girdle. For example, for a crown main facet 126 in a direction dividing an angle between the x-axis and the y-axis equally into two, a plane that crosses vertically an eight-dividing plane in the direction dividing the angle between the x-axis and the y-axis equally into two and has a predetermined crown angle is formed to pass the vertex 125 of the table facet. A point 129 at which the intersecting line of the plane with the eight-dividing plane 170 crosses the girdle 110 is a vertex on the girdle. Thus, the crown main facet 126 has two opposite vertexes 125 and 129. Other seven crown main facets 126 are formed similarly. Points of equal depths from the table facets on the intersection lines of neighboring crown main facets are vertexes 121. The eight tetragonal crown main facets 126 thus formed each cross vertically the eight-dividing planes, and have an equal crown angle (c).
Each of the star facets 132 is a triangle having a bottom side coinciding with each side of the table facet 122 (for example, a line segment 123-125), and a vertex coinciding with a point 121 jointly owned by two neighboring crown main facets 126 and 126 each having vertexes at opposite ends 123 and 125 of the bottom side (for example, 123-125).
Each of the upper girdle facets 136 has a bottom side coinciding with a side (for example, 127-121), whose end (for example, 127) is on the upper ridge of the girdle 110, among sides of the crown main facet 126, and a vertex (for example, 138) on the girdle upper ridge. The upper girdle facet 136 is generally a triangle, but is sometimes an oval sector with an intersecting line with the girdle being an oval sector as shown. In this example, two upper girdle facets 136are neighboring with a boundary coinciding with a line connecting a crossing point of the eight-dividing plane 170 and the girdle 110 and the vertex 121 jointly owned by neighboring crown main facets.
With reference to FIGS. 2 to 4, the pavilion 140 has a bottom apex 162, that is, a culet at a lower end of the central axis. The pavilion 140 is an oval cone between the bottom apex 162 and the lower ridge of the girdle 110, and has eight pavilion main facets 142 and 144 and sixteen lower girdle facets on an outer periphery of the pavilion 140.
As is apparent from a comparison between the pavilion 140 in the bottom view in
The pavilion main facets 142 and 144 extend from the bottom apex 162 in directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180′ and 180″ between the bottom apex 162 and the lower ridge of the girdle 110, and each of the pavilion main facet 142 extending in the direction of the second eight-dividing plane 180′ and the pavilion main facet 144 extending in the direction of the second eight-dividing plane 180″ is a tetragon or a part of a tetragon. The pavilion main facet 142 jointly owns a side 186, whose end is the bottom apex 162, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 144. The pavilion main facet 142 jointly owns a side 186 (a side extending in the x-axis direction), whose end is the bottom apex 162, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 142 across the x-axis. The pavilion main facet 144 jointly owns a side 186 (a side extending in the y-axis direction), whose end is the bottom apex 162, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 144 across the y-axis.
Each of the lower girdle facets is a triangle or an oval sector formed between each of the pavilion main facets 142 and 144 and the lower ridge of the girdle 110 on an outer peripheral surface of the oval cone of the pavilion, and having a bottom side coinciding with a side, whose end is on the girdle lower ridge, among sides of the pavilion main facets, and a vertex on the girdle lower ridge.
A circumscribed circle 147 circumscribing the girdle at opposite ends of the long axis of the girdle 110 is drawn around the central axis (see
With reference to
In EXAMPLE 1, the pavilion main facets 142 and 144 connect the bottom apex 162 of the central axis and the points 153′ and 153″ on the circumscribed circle 147, and the pavilion main facets cross vertically the second eight-dividing planes, and have an equal angle (pavilion angle (p)) with the table facet 122. As described above, the crown 120 preferably has the structure in which the eight crown main facets cross vertically the eight-dividing planes, and have an equal angle (crown angle (c)) with the table facet 122.
The oval-cut diamond 100 according to the example does not have an equal girdle height around a whole circumference of the girdle. The oval-cut diamond 100 has a small girdle height on the long axis side, and a large girdle height on the short axis side. In the crown, points at which each of ridges between neighboring upper girdle facets and each of ridges between the upper girdle facets and the crown main facets cross the girdle are successively connected to form a substantially straight line 112. However, the pavilion main facets 142 and 144 have diagonal lines connecting the bottom apex and the points on the circumscribed circle 147, and thus the pavilion main facet 142 near the x-axis crosses the oval girdle 110 near the circumscribed circle 147, and the pavilion main facet 144 near the y-axis crosses the oval girdle 110 at a distance from the circumscribed circle 147 in a −z-axis direction. Thus, as shown in
In the oval or oval-like shape formed by the contour line of the girdle, as shown in
The oval-cut diamond 100 has four pairs of pavilion main facets, of which each pair is composed of two pavilion main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis. The pairs each composed of two pavilion main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis are two pairs of two pavilion main facets 142 extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180′, and two pairs of two pavilion main facets 144 extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180″. The two pavilion main facets constituting each pair of pavilion main facets and the table facet have a common vertical plane within them. Further, the diamond 100 has four pairs of crown main facets, of which each pair is composed of two crown main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis. The pairs of crown main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis are a pair of crown main facets extending in the x-axis direction, a pair of crown main facets extending in the y-axis direction, and two pairs of crown main facets extending in the directions of the bisectors. The two crown main facets constituting each pair of crown main facets and the table facet have a common vertical plane within them. Also, the pavilion main facets have a substantially equal angle (pavilion angle (p)) with the table facet. The diamond 100 having such a facet configuration has an enhanced brilliancy.
Thus, the light comes from the table facet or the facet on the crown, is reflected twice in the diamond, and goes out of the diamond 100 from the table facet or the facet on the crown. Light coming from the table facet or the facet on the crown, reflected twice in the diamond, and going out of the diamond 100 from the table facet or the facet on the crown has the most enhanced brilliancy. The larger number of times of reflection reduces strength.
Light coming into a −x-axis side half of the table facet 122 or the star facet 132b on that side travels toward the pavilion main facet 142 on the opposite side of the girdle, and also, a part of the light travels toward lower girdle facets 152i and 152h on opposite sides of the pavilion main facet 142. Light coming from the two crown main facets 126b and 126 on opposite sides of the star facet 132b, and a part of light coming from the two upper girdle facets 136 between the crown main facet and the girdle travel toward the lower girdle facets 152i and 152h on opposite sides of the pavilion main facet 142. A part of light reflected by the lower girdle facets 152i and 152h and a part of light reflected by the pavilion main facet 142 travel toward lower girdle facets 152e and 152f on opposite sides of the pavilion main facet 142 on the opposite side with respect to the z-axis (+z-axis side), and are reflected. A part of the light passes through the two crown main facets and the two upper girdle facets around the star facet 132a on the +x-axis side and goes out of the diamond 100, and the crown main facets and the upper girdle facets 136 also become brilliant.
In the diamond 100, one of the pavilion and the crown is rotated by about 22.5° (a sixteenth revolution) around its central axis from the position of an ordinary brilliant cut diamond. Thus, the crown main facet (for example, the crown main facet on the +x-axis side) 126a does not face any pavilion main facet across the girdle, but simply partially faces two pavilion main facets extending in the +x-axis direction. However, the crown main facet 126a faces two lower girdle facets 152d and 152e extending in the +x-axis direction across the girdle. The crown main facet 126b on the −x-axis side faces the two lower girdle facets 152g and 152h extending in the −x-axis direction across the girdle. The four pavilion main facets (the pavilion main facets extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180′) interposing the four lower girdle facets 152d, 152e, 152g and 152h have an equal pavilion angle, and the pavilion main facets symmetrical with respect to the central axis have a common vertical plane, that is, a vertical plane passing the central axis. Thus, the two lower girdle facets 152d and 152g and the two lower girdle facets 152e and 152h symmetrical with respect to the central axis have opposite signs in an x-component and a y-component of a vector in a plane direction. Namely, the lower girdle facets 152d and 152g and the table facet 122 have a common vertical plane. Similarly, the lower girdle facets 152e and 152h and the table facet 122 have a common vertical plane.
If these facets have no common vertical plane, and for example, a pair of pavilion main facets extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180′ have no common vertical plane within them, light reaching one of the pavilion main facets do not travel toward the other pavilion main facet. Thus, the light is reflected four to six times or more in the diamond and goes out of the diamond from the table facet or the crown main facets, or passes without being reflected by the pavilion main facets or the lower girdle facets, thereby reducing a brilliancy of the diamond. In the oval brilliant cut diamond, the pavilion is used embedded in a seat as in the round brilliant cut diamond, and thus light going out of the diamond from each facet on the pavilion does not contribute to the brilliancy.
Table 1 shows the results of calculation of reflection evaluation indexes of the oval-cut diamond (a short-long radius ratio (b/a) of 0.8) of EXAMPLE 1. As is apparent from Table 1, the reflection evaluation indexes of the diamond are 308 and 321, and the diamond has a more enhanced brilliancy than a diamond of a comparative example described later. The shown reflection evaluation indexes are substantially equal to those of EXAMPLE 3 having adjusting facets.
An oval-cut diamond 200 according to EXAMPLE 2 of the present invention will be described with reference to FIGS. 7 to 10.
A horizontal cross-section of the girdle 210 has sixteen sides. Each of upper girdle facets 136 crosses an outer peripheral surface of the girdle 210 with a straight line, and each of lower girdle facets 152 crosses the outer peripheral surface of the girdle 210 with a straight line, and an intersection line of the upper girdle facet 136 and the outer peripheral surface of the girdle is a substantially straight line 212, while a line connecting opposite ends of an intersection line of the lower girdle facet and the outer peripheral surface of the girdle is curved downward on a short axis side and upward on a long axis side to form an oval. Thus, a girdle height is smaller on the long axis side, larger on the short axis side, and intermediate in the midpoint between the long axis side and the short axis side. In the diamond 200, structures of the facets of the crown and the pavilion are the same as those in the diamond 100, and a reflection property is also the same as the diamond 100.
EXAMPLE 3 of an oval-cut diamond of the present invention will be descried in detail with reference to the drawings.
In
With reference to FIGS. 12 to 14, the pavilion 340 has a bottom apex 362, that is, a culet at a lower end of a central axis. The pavilion 340 is a substantially oval cone between the bottom apex 362 and a lower ridge of the girdle 310, and has eight pavilion main facets 342 and 344 and sixteen lower girdle facets on an outer periphery.
The pavilion main facets 342 and 344 extend from the bottom apex 362 in directions of second eight-dividing planes 180′ and 180″ between the bottom apex 362 and the lower ridge of the girdle 310, and each of the pavilion main facet 342 extending in the direction of the second eight-dividing plane 180′ and the pavilion main facet 344 extending in the direction of the second eight-dividing plane 180″ is a tetragon or a part of a tetragon. The pavilion main facet 342 jointly owns a side 386, whose end is the bottom apex 362, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 344. The pavilion main facet 342 jointly owns a side 386 (a side extending in the x-axis direction), whose end is the bottom apex 362, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 342 across the x-axis. The pavilion main facet 344 jointly owns a side 386 (a side extending in the y-axis direction), whose end is the bottom apex 362, with a neighboring pavilion main facet 344 across the y-axis.
Each of the lower girdle facets is a triangle or an oval sector formed between each of the pavilion main facets 342 and 344 and the lower ridge of the girdle 310 on an outer peripheral surface of the oval cone of the pavilion, and having a bottom side coinciding with a side, whose end is on the girdle lower ridge, among sides of the pavilion main facets, and a vertex on the girdle lower ridge.
A circumscribed circle 347 circumscribing the girdle at opposite ends of the long axis of the girdle 310 is drawn around the central axis (see
With reference to
In EXAMPLE 3, the pavilion main facets 342 and 344 connect the bottom apex 362 of the central axis and the points 353′ and 353″ on the circumscribed circle 347, and the pavilion main facets cross vertically the second eight-dividing planes, and have an equal angle (pavilion angle (p)) with the table facets 122. As described above, the crown 120 preferably has the structure in which the eight crown main facets cross vertically the eight-dividing planes, and have an equal angle (crown angle (c)) with the table facet 122.
In the diamond 300, adjusting facets are formed between the pavilion main facets 342 and 344 formed on the pavilion 340 and the girdle lower ridge and between the lower girdle facets 352a, 352b and 352c and the girdle lower ridge.
As the adjusting facet, a tetragonal facet 398a is provided near the girdle of the lower girdle facet 352a on the short axis side. An intersecting line of the lower girdle facet 352a with the adjusting facet 398a forms a ridge 398. A distance from a zx-plane to the ridge 398 is preferably 0.5a to 0.6a in long radius (a). The ridge 398 extends across pavilion main facets 344 on opposite sides of the lower girdle facet 352a, a lower girdle facet 352b placed between the pavilion main facet 344 and the eight-dividing plane 170, and a neighboring lower girdle facet 352c, and crosses the girdle 310 in the middle of the pavilion main facet 342. The ridge 398 forms an adjusting facet 394 between the pavilion main facet 344 and the girdle 310, an adjusting facet 398b between the lower girdle facet 352b and the girdle 310, an adjusting facet 398c between the lower girdle facet 352c and the girdle 310, and a small adjusting facet between the pavilion main facet 342 and the girdle 310.
It is preferable that the adjusting facet 394 provided in the pavilion main facet 344 near the short axis has a slightly larger angle than a pavilion angle with the table facet, and that the adjusting facets 398a, 394, 398b and 398c are formed so that a girdle height is substantially equal around a whole circumference. As shown in a front view in
The oval-cut diamond 300 has four pairs of pavilion main facets, of which each pair is composed of two pavilion main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis. The pairs each composed of two pavilion main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis are two pairs of two pavilion main facets 342 extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180′, and two pairs of two pavilion main facets 344 extending in the directions of the second eight-dividing planes 180″. The two pavilion main facets constituting each pair of pavilion main facets and the table facet have a common vertical plane within them. Further, the diamond 300 has four pairs of crown main facets, of which each pair is composed of two crown main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis. The pairs of crown main facets positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis are a pair of crown main facets extending in the x-axis direction, a pair of crown main facets extending in the y-axis direction, and two pairs of crown main facets extending in the directions of the bisectors. The two crown main facets constituting each pair of crown main facets and the table facet have a common vertical plane within them. Also, the pavilion main facets have a substantially equal angle (pavilion angle (p)) with the table facet. The diamond 300 having such a facet configuration has an enhanced brilliancy.
An example of an oval-cut diamond that is a round brilliant cut diamond having a girdle flatly deformed in a vertical direction is shown in FIGS. 17 to 20, which is an oval-cut diamond 800 of a comparative example.
Thus, in the x-axis direction, a pair of crown main facets 826 and a pair of pavilion main facets 842 positioned opposite to each other with respect to the central axis, and the table facet 822 have a common vertical plane (shown by thick broken lines in
At a short-long radius ratio (b/a) less than 0.6, there appears a facet extremely elongated and difficult to machine in an oval-cut diamond, and thus a short-long radius ratio (b/a) needs to be 0.6 or more. Further, as shown in
Regions of Pavilion Angle (p) and Crown Angle (c)
Table 2 shows the results of calculation of reflection evaluation indexes of samples A to U with different pavilion angles (P) and different crown angles (c) in an oval-cut diamond (a short-long radius ratio (b/a) of 0.8).
Observing a reflection light pattern using the oval-cut diamond having the structure of each of the examples of the present invention described above, there appeared a strong reflection light pattern on the table facet and each facet on the crown. As shown in
As in the examples described above, the present invention may be applied to a modified oval-cut diamond by rotating the crown or the pavilion by a sixteenth revolution, which has an enhanced brilliancy of reflection light.
As the modified oval-cut diamond, the diamond having the oval girdle cross-section is described above, but the present invention can be applied to a diamond called “marquise” that has a contour line in a shape of two oval sectors (or circle sectors that are a kind of oval sectors) crossing each other on a girdle cross-section parallel to the table facet. The present invention can be also applied to a diamond called “pear-shape” that has a contour line in a shape of three oval sectors (or circle sectors that are a kind of oval sectors) crossing each other on a girdle cross-section parallel to the table facet.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-115084 | Apr 2004 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP05/05491 | 3/25/2005 | WO | 9/12/2006 |