I thought it meant cultured. Anyway, surely the Chinese molluscs naturally produce a pearl?
And we're sitting on pins and needles waiting for GIA Bangkok to unveil their certification of Dr. Tom's (and the world's) only Nautilus pearl? Talk about the blind leading the blind?No, not reliably at all. One lab may cert a keshi as a natural and another may cert it as a keshi. One lab may cert a cultured freshwater pearl as a natural and another may cert it as a cultured freshwater pearl.
Talk about the blind leading the blind…
are you advocating a fraud Slraep?
My remark was not meant seriously. Consider the use of irony
If one lab finds a pearl to be cultured and another finds the same pearl to be natural of what worth is a certificate? Does it say 'well maybe, we aren't really sure'
2. If a lab or two does give you a "natural" verdict for a CFWP, how much are they worth?
how much are which worth - the labs..the verdicts..or the pearls?2. If a lab or two does give you a "natural" verdict for a CFWP, how much are they worth?
How would you choose such a pearl to submit for a report? Say, freshwater and saltwater.
Seriously?
Since I am accused of being a lawyer,........
how would these certificates and the laboratory processes used hold up under examination in court?
I am not having any sort of a dig at anyone - just concerned that people are being steered towards paying for these inspections and they might be of little reliability.
Again, if a lab has identified a specific pearl as a nautilus, how has it done that without comparators - dna - no could not use that without damaging the pearl...so how?
If these labs are mis-identifying pearls - even once - then their opinion is without value.
... how would these certificates and the laboratory processes used hold up under examination in court?