JOIN US FOR OUR HEARTSTAR DIAMOND EVENT – APRIL 27, 28, 29 FREE SOLITAIRE WITH PURCHASE OF A HEARTSTAR DIAMOND
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HEARTSTAR: The Perfect Diamond
hat do you see when you look at a diamond? You see light...reflected and refracted. No other diamond reflects more light than a HeartStar. The HeartStar, one of the finest cut and proportioned round diamonds produced today, reflects up to 93 percent of incoming light.
LOVE SHOULD that gives the HeartStar diamond its name. Less than one percent of world diamond production is cut to these high standards. COME NATURALLY While this elite company does include “ideal cut,” “Tolkowsky cut” The HEARTSTAR diamond is the perfectly cut, natural diamond, and AGS “000 cut”natural diamonds, HeartStar iscut truly born of the finest crystal the and then perfectly for the best of exceptional brilliance. the best, clearly showing its perfect facet alignment, symmetry and brilliance.
Every HeartStar diamond is hand selected, regraded and oftenAVAILABLE AT Mark Schneider, one of the few living designers to have a piece re-polished. It is then sent to the American Gem Society’s Gem of jewelry on permanent display in the Smithsonian Institution Laboratory for the most stringent grading and certification in the Gem and Mineral Hall, will be visiting Butterfield Jewelers June industry. Many HeartStar diamonds are laser inscribed on the 22-24. Call to make an appointment to girdle with an AGS certificate number for security. design a custom piece with him! 2411 SAN PEDRO NE The history of the HeartStar dates back to 1919 when Marcel ALBUQUERQUE, NM, 87110 Tolkowsky—the Einstein of the diamond industry—published his groundbreaking work on the perfect diamond. He christened 505-884-5747 / 866-410-1716 it the “Modern American Brilliant Cut.” To this day, Tolkowsky’s basic 57 facet formula has never been improved upon. Butterfield Jewelers 2411 San Pedro NE, Albuquerque 505.884.5747 ButterfieldJewelers.com
Only in the last decade or so has cutting technology been good enough to consistently produce the HeartStar. Upon close inspection, one can make out the classic heart and star pattern Mark Schneider