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Pavilion

Jewelry Pavé settingPavilion angle

Pavilion Depth
In order to explain the important function of the pavilion facets, Fig 238 shows that the light falling from above into a brilliant can only be reflected back by total internal reflection on the pavilion facets, ...

 


Pavilion Facets
Main Pavilion Facets
Also often simply called pavilion facets, these are the eight large four-sided facets which run from the bottom point or culet, to the girdle.
Lower Girdle Facets ...

Pavilion: The pointed section of a cut gemstone just below the girdle ending in the culet.
Pavilion Height: The distance from the girdle to the culet of a cut gemstone.

PAVILION
The pavilion is the lower part of a cut gemstone, below the girdle.
PEAR CUT ...

Pavilion Main Facets
There are Eight Pavilion Main Facets. These are long Diamond shaped (or Kite Shaped) Facets that go from the very bottom of the Diamond and point upwards towards the Girdle.
Culet ...

Pavilion: The bottom part of the Diamond, below the girdle.
Pinpoints: Miniscule spots internal to a Diamond. A cluster of pinpoints can form a cloud.
Tone: A color's position on a colorless-to-black scale.

Pavilion
The bottom part of the diamond below the girdle.
Princess cut diamond
A diamond that is square in shape, also a very bright diamond, and similar in sparkle to the brilliant cut diamond.

pavilion The portion of a faceted stone beneath the girdle.
This site's creator? HarryDidIt.com ...

Pavilion: The lower part of a faceted gem below the girdle.
Point: One hundredth of a carat.
Polish: The external finish of a stone, which ranges from excellent to poor.

Pavilion
Pavilion is the bottom part of a cut stone just below the girdle.
Pear Cut
Pear Cut is a style of cut that is shaped like a pear or a tear.

Pavilion: The lower portion of the gemstone. The pavilion begins just below the girdle.

Pavilion Angle
The angle measured between the girdle and the pavilion main facet.
Pavilion Main Facets ...

PAVILION - That portion of a faceted diamond or other gem material that lies below the girdle.
PEAR SHAPED CUT - A fashioning style for gemstones with the girdle outline in the shape of a tear drop or pear.

Pavilion: The pavilion is the bottom, the part of the gem below the girdle. In a well proportioned gem, it usually accounts for 2/3 to 3/4 of the total depth of the gem.

[Pavilion view diagrams of round and emerald cut faceted gems] ...

Pavilion: Bottom of the stone, under the girdle, measuring to the culet. It is the area below the girdle consisting of 23 facets in the round brilliant cut diamond.

Pavilion: This is the bottom portion of the diamond, under the girdle, measuring to the culet.
Pear Cut: A type of fancy shape diamond that resembles a teardrop.

Pavilion
The lower part of a cut gemstone below the girdle
Pendaloque
A type of pear shaped or tear drop gemstone faceted as a brilliant cut and suspended from a smaller stone which is usually separated by a bow or other motif ...

Pavilion
The portion of the diamond below the girdle.
Pinpoints ...

Pavilion
The portion of a facetted gemstone below the girdle.
Phenomenon
An optical effect which appears in certain gemstone materials. Often revealed by or enhanced by proper fashioning.

Pavilion The lower portion of a gemstone that begins just below the girdle.
Pear Cut Resembling a pear or teardrop, this fancy cut is rounded on one end and pointed on the other.

Pavilion: The lower portion of the diamond, below the girdle.
Pear Cut: A type of fancy shape diamond that resembles a teardrop.

Pavilion: The bottom part of the Diamond, below the girdle.
Pear Shaped Cut - A fashioning style for gemstones with the girdle outline in the shape of a tear drop or pear.

pavilion
The part of a cut diamond that lies below the girdle
pavilion angle
The angle at which the main facets of a diamond's pavilion instersect with the plane of its girdle ...

Pavilion - A faceted stone can be divided into an upper and lower section. The upper section or top is referred to as a crown. The lower section is referred to as a pavilion. The perimeter where both parts meet is referred to as a girdle.

Pavilion: The base portion of a gemstone or diamond.
Peridot: A gem variety of olivine that is yellowish-green. Slightly soft, its facets often appear worn away in older jewellery. Pronounced 'pear-uh-doh.' Has been found in meteorites.

pavilion depth A 43% pavilion depth is indicative of 40.75 degrees angles which is optimum for internal light reflection. The pavilion depth is measured from just below the girdle to the culet.

Pavilion Height - The distance from the girdle to the bottom (cutlet) of a diamond
Pawn - Jewelry given or deposited as security for money borrowed.

Pavilion:
The bottom half of a diamond, from the lower girdle to the culet at the bottom tip. If the pavilion is too deep or too shallow, light will leak out and the diamond will lose fire and brilliance.

Pavilion
A lower surface of a brilliant-cut gem slanting outward from the culet to the girdle.
Pearl ...

pavilion
The pavilion is the lower sloping portion of a cut and faceted gemstone. See the picture at right. Select here for more information on the portions of a cut and faceted gemstone.
pliers ...

Pavilion - The bottom of a faceted gemstone, from the girdle to the culet.
Pavilion depth - Along with crown height, pavilion depth determines the overall proportion and symmetry of a gemstone cut.

Pavilion: The pavilion is the bottom part of the diamond that begins at the girdle and extends downward to the point of the culet
Culet: The culet is the tiny flat facet at the bottom tip of the diamond ...

PAVILION
The pavilion is the bottom or base portion of a diamond or gemstone; the lower part below the girdle.
PEAR CUT ...

Pavilion: The lower section of a diamond from the girdle to the culet.
Culet: The tip of a diamond (the best culet is invisible to the naked eye).
Depth: The height of a diamond measured from the culet to the table.

Pavilion: The bottom part of the diamond.
Point: A point is a weight measurement that is equal to 1/100 of a carat. A 23 point diamond is .23 ct.

Pavilion: A diamond's bottom portion.
Point: One hundredth of a carat.
Polish: The external finish of a stone, which ranges from excellent to poor.

PAVILION MAINS 8
CULET 1
A full cut Diamond has 58 facets. A single cut Diamond is one in which there are 16 facets, and is a common cutting style in Diamonds up to about five points in size.

Pavilion
The pavilion is the bottom portion of a cut stone, beginning at the girdle and going to the point at its end.

Pavilion (or base): That portion of a polished diamond below the girdle.
Pear-shape cut: A variation of the brilliant cut, having a pear-shaped girdle outline.

Pavilion: The part of a cut gemstone below the girdle.
Pear Cut: Gemstone cut that resembles a pear or teardrop - rounded on one end and pointed on the other.


Pavilion Double Fifteen Color Dot Dominoes in Color Collectors Tin
Parlour Games
by Mavis Cheek ...


Pavilion
The lower part of a diamond, located between the girdle and the culet.

The Russian pavilion
Appendix
Official Classification of Exhibits at Exposition (from Morss, Appendix): ...

The cutting style was developed in 1910 and requires that a stone be cut with a round girdle, 32 facets plus the table on the crown or upper part of the diamond, and 24 facets plus, sometimes a culet (point) on the pavilion or lower part of the ...

This new cut enhanced the fire and light of the stone; it had a small table, a high crown, wide step facets, a deep pavilion and square culet. This cut became very popular in Art Deco jewelry and was a forerunner of the emerald cut.

jewelry Aigrette Jeweled ornament in the shape of a feather or supporting a feather, worn in the hair or on a cap, popular in the middle of the eighteenth century and the early twentieth century A Jour Open setting that leaves the pavilion ...

On the pavilion are sixteen lower girdle facets and eight pavilion mains. You may or may not have a culet at the point.

Doublet - an assembled gemstone with a crown portion of one material bonded to a pavilion portion of another material.
Double refraction - the separation of light passing through a substance into two rays.

See also "crown" and "pavilion" for more information about the details of a stone's cut. Italian Charms Interlocking links that can be hooked together to form a bracelet, keychain or other accessories.

Culet:The point at the bottom of the pavilion of a diamond. The preferred culet grades for a round diamond range from none to small because med to large cutlets affect the diamond's light performance.

Pavilion: The term for the bottom portion of a diamond. The pavilion resets below the girdle section. Pendant: Any object that is suspended from a neck chain.

The 'old-mine' cut came after and was basically a rounded square with a small table surface and a very high crown in relation to the pavilion.

Faceted gems feature two parts, crown and pavilion. The crown's job is to catch light and create scintillation (and dispersion, in the case of diamond), while the pavilion is responsible for both brilliance and scintillation.

Therefore, it is not possible to determine the individual contributions of the crown, girdle and pavilion to the total depth and no crown or pavilion angles are given.

Cushion Cut Diamond - Three Pavilion Patterns
The standards for cushion cut vary more than most other shapes, and personal taste will dictate choice.

Developed by South African diamond cutter Basil Watermeyer in 1971, barion cuts allow adaptation of the round brilliant style of pavilion facets to angular shapes, such as the emerald, square emerald, kite, triangle, pentagon and hexagon.

Rectangular step-cut stones cut with the table parallel to c-axis in deeply colored stones often have steep pavilion facets at the ends of the rectangle to minimize the deep color parallel to c.

Two keys to a diamond's brilliance are its crown and pavilion. The crown is the top portion of a diamond extending from the girdle (the outermost edge of a cut gem) to the table. The pavilion is the part of the diamond below the girdle.

It has rows (steps) of elongated facets on the crown and pavilion, parallel to the girdle, with sets on each of four sides and at the corners.

The standard brilliant-cut consists of 58 facets, 33on the top or crown of the stone, 25 on the base or pavilion. The crown has a large 8 sided cental facet called the table. The culet is the small facet of the pavilion, parallel to the table.

See also: Diamond, Facet, Color, Shape, Table