Gem News International Gems & Gemology, Spring 2014, Vol. 50, No. 1

Geo-Literary Society Meeting


The Geo-Literary Society held its annual meeting on Feb. 14 at the Tucson Convention Center. The event, which drew attendees from the Tucson Gem and Mineral Shows, featured presentations by Scott Sucher and Al Gilbertson in a session titled “The Evolution of Diamond Cutting.”

Sucher, president of The Stonecutter in Albuquerque, New Mexico, has created replicas of famous diamonds for more than 30 years. Gilbertson, a research associate at GIA in Carlsbad, California, has authored numerous articles on diamond cut and grading, as well as the 2007 book American Cut: The First 100 Years.

Sucher opened the session by chronicling the early history of diamond use, global trade patterns, and advances in cutting techniques and styles. Using computer models, he compared the brilliance and fire of several early diamond cuts.

Gilbertson picked up the story with the discovery of Brazilian diamond deposits around 1725, which ushered in a period of glittery excess among European elites. David Jeffries, whose 1750 treatise described the use of a handheld “prover” to measure cutting angles, coined the term “round brilliant” for a cut that contained 58 facets.

The discovery of massive diamond deposits in South Africa in 1867 changed the course of the industry, making these treasures available to a mass market. By 1870, there were 10,000 cutters in Europe. These artisans followed the shape of the original crystal and kept as much of the original weight as possible.

But the emphasis on weight retention was beginning to unravel thanks to Henry Morse, who set up a cutting shop in Boston around 1860. Morse, who once said, “Shopping for diamonds by the carat is like buying a racehorse by the pound,” emphasized the cut of a stone and the brilliance that resulted. He invented a gauge to measure crown and pavilion angles, and devised his own set of best proportions. He also helped develop mechanical bruting, which increased the production of round-cut diamonds.

With turn-of-the-century improvements such as the circular saw, which made it easy to cut two diamonds from a rough crystal, the stage was set for the modern round brilliant. In 1919, Belgian engineer Marcel Tolkowsky published a landmark book, titled Diamond Design, in which he asserted that the best-cut stones feature a 53% table, 59% total depth, and a knife-edged girdle. With some modifications to Tolkowsky’s proportions—an extended lower half, a larger table, and a closed-up culet—the round brilliant as we know it was established by 1950.

As Gilbertson pointed out, the breakthroughs in diamond cut planning and evaluation were just beginning. The Firescope viewer, developed in 1986, allowed the user to see a “Hearts and Arrows” pattern in a diamond cut to these “ideal” proportions. The Sarin scanner, introduced six years later, offered rapid, accurate proportion measurement, which led to the various cut grading services available today. Among other recent advances are inclusion-mapping software and high-speed laser cutting.

Following the presentation, Sucher invited the audience to view his faceted replicas of Cullinans I and II, the Koh-i-Noor, the Hope, and several other historical diamonds.

“Scott Sucher transported us to the early days of diamond cutting as we learned the first sources and tools,” said Dona Dirlam, the Geo-Literary Society’s secretary and the host of the session. “We saw how cutting styles evolved with improvements in the tools and an increase in the diamond supply. With each development, we saw this fascinating transformation through visual models.

“Al Gilbertson told us the largely unknown story of Henry Morse and chronicled the birth of the modern round brilliant,” Dirlam added. “As Al and Scott pointed out, today’s computer-optimized diamond cutting seems light-years removed from the earliest techniques.”

Stuart Overlin is the editor of Gems & Gemology.