Color Scale
What Is Diamond Color?
Due to the impurities found in the earth, diamonds are typically yellow, brown, or gray in hue. The diamond color scale incorporates these criteria into the rating of these diamonds.
The diamond's real color - for example, white, yellow, pink, brown, or blue - is included in the diamond's hue. It is the range of hue from light to dark that defines a gem's tone. Finally, saturation refers to the color's depth and intensity. Saturation does not exist in colorless diamonds. They have fire and sparkle instead.

International Color Scale
Diamonds are graded on a scale of D to Z based on the degree of yellow, brown, or grey in the stone's color. Diamonds are placed face down on pure white paper by gemologists to evaluate color defects. Diamonds with a D rating must be icy white and colorless, whereas those with a Z rating have a yellowish tint. Diamonds rated N through Z are rarely used in jewelry because of their rarity.

Diamond Color Grading
Colorless Grade
Grading in the GIA is done using Arabic and Roman numbers and the first three letters of the alphabet. The GIA's new grade system begins with a D. Even though this is a abnormal letter to begin a rating system, diamond buyers have adapted.
Diamonds with a clarity grade of D, E, or F are colorless to the extreme. The only method to detect the slightest differences is to use electric colorimeter. As there are no yellow or brown tints in any of the three colorless grades, customers are unable to discern the difference. The difference between D, E, and F colorless diamonds is minimal.
Almost Colorless Grades
Diamonds with a H coloration are the first to show a obvious yellow tone to the human eye. Colors are more noticeable in the I and J diamonds than in H diamonds.
Faintly Colored Grades


Colored Diamonds: What Are They?
They have their own grading system because their color is outside the normal color range. All of the colors in the rainbow can be found in fancy-colored diamonds, which are extremely rare. When they have an opalescent gloss instead of the conventional clarity found in a white diamond, even white diamonds can be fancy.
Frequently, lab-created fancy-colored diamonds are found. They're as hard as a genuine diamond and last just as long. Diamonds created in a lab rather than mined are more affordable. However, due to their rarity, they can be more expensive than white diamonds.
Color Effects the Price of a Diamond
Within grading systems, color variations can affect the value by 10% or more. Color flaws can effect a diamond's value by hundreds or thousands of dollars, especially when the carat, cut, and clarity are also taken into account.
How Does a Diamond's Shape Affect Its Color?
There are few cuts that are better at hiding color than a round diamond. Small facets obscure the underlying color of these gems. To show more color, look for diamonds with wide facets like an emerald, oval, or pear.
Impact of Setting on Diamond Coloration
Traditional yellow gold settings appear better on stones with a light hue and a grading higher than J. The yellow gold calms the yellow hue of the diamond, as the stone tries to absorb the gold's color. Higher grade diamonds can seem practically colorless in gold settings.
How Carat Affects the Color of a Diamond?
In smaller diamonds, a combination of carat weight and setting can obscure the hue. Consider a higher color rating if you want to purchase a huge diamond. As a last point, choose a diamond that you like at a price that is within your budget.

Diamond Color Scale FAQs
Because red diamonds are extremely rare, they are the most precious color. The most precious and rarest white diamonds are those with a D grade. Purple, blue, orange, and green diamonds are also expensive because of their rarity.
It is the diamond’s natural hue that determines how light travels through the stone. It is easier for light to penetrate through diamonds with less natural color, resulting in more brightness and fire.