VWBEAMER wrote:A friend of mine owned a pawn sop, he had a quart jar half full of diamonds. He would buy rings and stuff for gold value and get the diamonds for free. he would knock them out and keep them in a jar.
BTW, the lesson here is not to not buy diamonds, the lesson is to not buy buy diamonds at the mall. Go to respected Mom and Pop jeweler. Your going to get ripped off, but at a discount. That same set at a good jeweler would have been 1600 or so.
pennypicker wrote:VWBEAMER wrote:A friend of mine owned a pawn sop, he had a quart jar half full of diamonds. He would buy rings and stuff for gold value and get the diamonds for free. he would knock them out and keep them in a jar.
BTW, the lesson here is not to not buy diamonds, the lesson is to not buy buy diamonds at the mall. Go to respected Mom and Pop jeweler. Your going to get ripped off, but at a discount. That same set at a good jeweler would have been 1600 or so.
Good advice. My granddaughter didn't buy the set from a jeweler at the mall. It was at a jeweler in a mall that we took the set to get an offer and it was this jeweler who told us how low grade the diamonds were!
TXBullion wrote:I dont like diamonds. Maybe for industrial use. Do the research on them and you will find it out it is an artificially created high price. I came to peace with this for the purchase of an engagement ring. Its not worth explaining to your to be fiance on why you didnt get her one. They dream of them their whole lives so get it for them. If you are bold and able to break the chain, my hat goes off to you. Then again, I would not advocate to finance jewelry either......
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:If they paid 50% down, how is it that she still owes the total amount of the purchase plus interest? Even with high interest rates (justified by the high risk of this type of financing) shouldn't the total owed be about 1800-1900?
pennypicker wrote:HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:If they paid 50% down, how is it that she still owes the total amount of the purchase plus interest? Even with high interest rates (justified by the high risk of this type of financing) shouldn't the total owed be about 1800-1900?
HCBTT you are absolutely correct. When I wrote the post I was somewhat angry and forgot to proofread it otherwise I would have caught my error. Yes over $1900 is still owed and they both signed on the dotted line. The fiancee has agreed to pay the full balance owned since it was his act of infidelity that caused the engagement to end and he's letting my granddaughter keep the ring as well. We sold the ring for $700 through a private add in the paper and my granddaughter used that $700 to offset most of the $950 (her half of the down payment) so she is now only out $250 from the entire ordeal. Of course her credit rating could still be on the line depending on whether or not the ex-fiancee makes the remaining $1900 in payments in a timely manner!
But particulars aside, diamonds probably are the biggest retail scam ever perpetrated on the American public. :o
rickygee wrote:Take your soon to be blushing bride to Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas, hand her a shovel, bucket, seive, big staw hat if it's sunny and tell her her dreamed of diamond is in there somewhere. She just has to do her part and find it. You'll pay to have it mounted in a gorgeous copper setting .
Nickelmeister wrote:I agree with much that has been posted on this thread, HOWEVER - you cannot put a price on the years of happiness (and conversely, unhappiness) you will enjoy having pleased your wife with the "perfect" diamond ring. Happy wife = happy life
Disclosure: I just gave my long-time girlfriend a diamond engagement ring and she said yes
Nickelmeister wrote:I agree with much that has been posted on this thread, HOWEVER - you cannot put a price on the years of happiness (and conversely, unhappiness) you will enjoy having pleased your wife with the "perfect" diamond ring. Happy wife = happy life
Disclosure: I just gave my long-time girlfriend a diamond engagement ring and she said yes
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