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GIA Aligns Lab-Grown Reports with FTC Standards
Mar 31, 2019 8:09 AM
By Rapaport News
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RAPAPORT... The Gemological Institute of America (GIA) has updated the
language in its lab-grown-diamond certificates to conform to the recent Federal Trade Commission (FTC) guidelines.
The grading lab will no longer use the term synthetic when
referring to diamonds created in a lab, either inside its reports, or in the title, it said Friday. The GIA will
continue to use descriptive terms of color and clarity for lab-grown diamonds, indicating the range of grading they refer to on a scale in the report.
Additionally, the certificate will include a QR code which
will link to the GIA’s report-check service, and provide consumers with more
information about the growth process of lab-grown diamonds. It will also list
any detected clarity treatments the stone has undergone.
The GIA will include a comment on the report disclosing the
fact that the stone is man-made and has been produced using either chemical vapor deposition (CVD) or High-Pressure, High-Temperature (HPHT).
“Over the past few years, there has been an incredible
advancement in the technology by which laboratory-grown diamonds are made,”
said GIA CEO Susan Jacques. “With the increased availability of man-made
diamonds in commercial qualities, sizes and quantities, and with greater
consumer awareness of and desire for this product, GIA is making these changes
to align with the revised FTC guides and changes in the market.”
Earlier this month, HRD Antwerp announced changes to its
lab-grown-diamond reports, including updating the language to match those of
natural diamonds, and expanding its color categories for synthetic stones. It
will also launch a lab-grown-diamond-jewelry report in September.
The new GIA lab-grown-diamond reports will be available from
July 1. Customers that have purchased synthetic-diamond reports from the GIA
prior to that date can exchange them for a new certificate at no cost, the GIA
noted.
Correction, April 1, 2019: The GIA will not be adopting the same 4Cs descriptions that it uses for natural diamonds in its lab-grown diamond grading reports, as initially indicated in the above story. It will continue to use descriptions such as "near colorless" and "very slightly included" when describing the color and clarity of a lab-grown diamond.
Image: A sample GIA lab-grown-diamond grading report. (GIA)
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Tags:
chemical vapor deposition, cvd, federal trade commission, ftc, Gemological Institute of America, GIA, High-Pressure, High-Temperature, HPHT, Lab-Grown Reports, Rapaport News, Susan Jacques
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