Tiffany’s Yellow Diamonds
The name
Tiffany & Co has such a ring to it. And say Tiffany
and diamonds in the same sentence and it starts to warm up,
particularly when the diamonds in question are sunshine-bright
yellow diamonds. These fancy yellow diamonds (and the term
'fancy yellow' is a technical grading, not PR puff) are ripe with
colour, even on the dullest winter day. As well the stuff of
dreams, hundreds of thousands of pounds solitaire rings and
earrings, there are more affordable variations such as the Diamonds
by the Yard pendant designed by Elsa Perreti. Tiffany & Co is
exemplary in its commitment to knowing where materials come. When
the firm went public in the late 1980s, the increase in size meant
that it made business sense to produce most of its jewellery
internally and so vertically integrated its production processes,
controlling every step of production from mining to smelting.
Likewise, these yellow diamonds are sourced through an agreement
with Gem Diamonds' Ellendale mine in Western Australia. The
agreement gives Tiffany & Co. exclusive rights to the mine's
production of fancy color yellow diamonds over its full economic
life. " The agreement gives us a unique opportunity to extend our
diamond authority with exceedingly rare fancy yellow
diamonds," said Jon King, executive vice president of Tiffany
& Co. " The collection underscores our design heritage with
settings that fully reveal the stones' natural beauty and warm
yellow color." This also means that every diamond has a traceable
origin, something that cannot be said of all diamonds on the
market, where batches rather than individual diamonds are
certified. And coloured diamonds are rarer than their white
cousins, with only one in 10,000 making the grade. So if you want
to spread a little sunshine, you know what colour diamond to
chose.