If you stumbled across a diamond before it transformed in the hands of a William Goldberg gem cutter into an Ashoka diamond cut, it would resemble a piece of sea glass caressed into translucent smoothness by ocean waves. A Master Cutter with William Goldberg begins with this glassy wonder, studies it to discover what shape is calling to him from beneath the surface, and coaxes from it the stunning shape and shine of a select Ashoka diamond cut, individual in every aspect.
The rarity of an
Ashoka diamond cut stems from a combination of the rare craftsmanship of William Goldberg Master Cutters, who have been working for the gem giant for decades, combined with the exceptional scarcity of gems this size. In any given year, only two hundred diamonds are discovered in a size of fifteen carats or more"and William Goldberg diamonds are among the very few jewelers with access to these rarest of the rare large stones.
After studying an uncut diamond and feeling the cut gem within, a Master Cutter goes about releasing that beauty from within its uncut shape, using a diamond saw (yes, made of diamond) lubricated with diamond powder and oil to cut against the stone's grain with less chance of shattering the stone"but even with the best tools, the artist needs patience and the perfect delicate touch to avoid destroying the stone.
The appearance of an Ashoka diamond cut is notable for its unparalleled balance of refracted and reflected light, with the facets of the stone positioned particularly for the capture and release of brilliant light that give the stone its own brilliance"but for the artist Master Cutter, that explanation is merely the science of physics that explains the end result of his art. He feels the stone and knows how it calls him to cut it.
William Goldberg diamonds include the proprietary cut Ashoka collection, named for a legendary forty-one Karat diamond mined in India in the third century and named for a Buddhist warrior-king, which has passed through many hands over the centuries and captured the imagination of millions. William Goldberg diamonds trademarked the Ashoka cut, reminiscent of that legend for which it was named, features a stunning sixty-two facets, and due to the additional scarcity of the extra-long shape needed in a rough diamond to create this cut, combined with the already existing scarcity of diamonds of this size, make the Ashoka an exceptional article. How else could a newly cut gem resonate with so much history, if not with the history inspired cut of the Ashoka, created with the artistic mastery of William Goldberg diamonds Master Cutters?