News

Advanced Search

Sotheby’s to Auction Rare Pink Diamond

Aug 31, 2022 4:41 AM   By Joshua Freedman
Comment Comment Email Email Print Print Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Share Share


RAPAPORT... 
One of the purest pink diamonds in history will go under the hammer at Sotheby’s later this year, carrying a presale estimate of HKD 170 million ($21 million).

The cushion-cut, 11.15-carat, fancy-vivid-pink, internally flawless stone, named the Williamson Pink Star, will appear at a stand-alone sale in Hong Kong on October 5, Sotheby’s said Wednesday. It is the second-largest diamond of that color and clarity ever to feature at auction, behind the 59.60-carat CTF Pink Star, which fetched a record $71.2 million at Sotheby’s in 2017.

“Driven by a limited supply and rising demand, prices for top-quality large pink diamonds over 5 carats have increased exponentially over the past decade,” said Wenhao Yu, chairman of jewelry and watches at Sotheby’s Asia.

At the estimated price, the stone would sell for around $1.9 million per carat. That compares with $1.2 million per carat for the CTF Pink Star.

The stone originates from a 32.32-carat rough from Petra Diamonds’ Williamson mine in Tanzania. Polished manufacturer Diacore bought the rough for $13.8 million at a tender last year and cut it into the cushion-shaped diamond that’s up for sale.

The name is a nod to both the CTF Pink Star and the Williamson stone, a brilliant-cut, 23.60-carat diamond that Queen Elizabeth II received as a wedding present in 1947 from Canadian geologist and royalist Dr. John Thorburn Williamson. Williamson owned the mine that bears his name in Mwadui, Tanzania, where that stone was discovered.

Image: The Williamson Pink Star. (Sotheby’s)
Tags: Joshua Freedman
Similar Articles
Comments: (0)  Add comment Add Comment
Arrange Comments Last to First