What Causes Fancy Color in Diamonds

21 Fun Facts – What Causes Diamond Color?

Only about 1 in 10,000 natural gem quality diamonds is fancy colored. Within that small percentage, some colors are more common than others, making certain of the colors extraordinarily rare. So, what causes us to see these various colors, and why are some so rare?

 

Let’s start with how we perceive color as human beings.

Visible light includes a series of component colors between infrared light, which is above 700 nanometers, and ultraviolet light, which is below 380 nanometers. What your naked eye perceives as white light is actually all visible colors combined, or all the wavelengths of the visible spectrum coming together. When all of those wavelengths enter the eye at once, we see them together as white light.

 

Visible LightCredit: Snyderman.com

 

Fun Fact #1:

Sir Isaac Newton originally identified seven hues in the visible spectrum: Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Those seven were traditionally taught as the acronym “ROY G BIV.” However, when viewing a rainbow, very few people distinguish a hue between blue and violet, so modern references to the spectrum often shorten the list to red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet.

 

White or Black = Full Reflection or Full Absorption

Fun Fact #2:

Any white object we see is simply reflecting back all hues in the visible spectrum. So, white is all colors reflected.

Fun Fact #3:

Likewise, any black object we see is absorbing or “eating” all hues in the visible spectrum. So, black is all colors absorbed. This is why you might burn your skin, sitting on a black leather seat in a black car on a hot day. It absorbs and stores the heat of all wavelengths of visible light coming from the sun.

 

Reflection vs Absorption

 

Color = Selective Absorption

Any colored object we see is simply absorbing or “eating” certain colored wavelengths, selectively, from white light. That results in the object transmitting or reflecting the other colored rays more or less strongly.

Fun Fact #4:

The best example of selective color absorption may be plant life. Plant life absorbs every color wavelength except… You guessed it. Green. All other wavelengths remain within the plant. The only wavelengths being transmitted to your eye from the plant are green.

Selective AbsorptionCredit: Medium.com

 

Color in Diamonds

Fun Fact #5:

When white light enters a diamond it starts breaking down into its component hues, like a prism. If none of those colors are absorbed and they all wind up exiting the diamond, we see the diamond as white, or colorless.

Fun Fact #6:

Whenever we see color in a diamond, it’s due to a combination of the visible hues which are being selectively absorbed by the diamond material, versus those which successfully transmit through the diamond to reach your eye. Scientifically speaking, this is how IGI gemologists determine why a diamond shows a certain color. And it’s really interesting to know why a diamond looks yellow, pink, green, etc. Let’s continue with more fun facts.

Diamond Refraction

 

 

Yellow, Orange and Brown

Yellow, orange and brown are caused by nitrogen, the most common of non-carbon atoms found in diamonds.

Fun Fact #7:

When nitrogen absorption occurs at low wavelengths the color is yellow.

Fun Fact #8:

When it occurs at higher wavelengths the color becomes orange (with some exceptions).

Fun Fact #9:

Brown is also caused by nitrogen along with another absorption causing feature, which are defects in the crystal lattice.

Nitrogen in DiamondsCredit: Christie’s

 

Gray

Fun Fact #10:

We see gray due to the presence of hydrogen, or sometimes boron. And speaking of boron, one of the rarest and most valuable natural diamond colors is also caused by boron. That would be…

Gray DiamondCredit: Christie’s

 

Blue

Fun Fact #11:

Fancy blue diamonds. They are very rare in nature, but they exist. Boron in a diamond primarily absorbs yellow light. When that yellow is canceled out, it permits us to see the blue wavelengths.

Blue DiamondCredit: Christie’s

 

Purple

It may surprise you to know there is not a decisive explanation for what causes us to see purple in natural diamonds. Hydrogen or boron can be present, just as with blue or gray, but we suspect that extremes of pressure also compressed the crystal lattice in a way that causes the blue or gray transmission to change to purple. Bringing us to…

Fun Fact #12:

Whenever you see a purple diamond you can tell your friends that the reason behind its color remains one of the very few unsolved mysteries of the gemological world.

Purple DiamondsCredit: Christie’s

 

Pink and Red

Pink and red in diamonds are not caused by chemical impurities.

Fun Fact #13:

As we suspect influences purple, pink and red are caused by deformation of the crystal lattice. Incredible pressures during the growth cycle fostered structural defects that cause pink to red light to be transmitted.

Fun Fact #14:

The greater the pressure, the greater the deformation, the greater the color saturation. This is why red diamonds are only found at small carat weights. The pressure which gave them such high saturation also prevented them from growing large.

Pink DiamondCredit: Christie’s

 

Green

Green also has a unique color foundation.

Fun Fact #15:

Green natural diamond color can be caused by exposure to atomic radiation in the earth where the diamond formed. With that said, it’s possible for nitrogen, hydrogen or nickel atoms to cause green transmission as well.

Fun Fact #16:

Most greens have hints of yellow, blue, or gray, making pure green diamonds extremely valuable. In 2016, the 5.03 carat fancy vivid Aurora Green, at bottom right, was sold by Christie’s for more than $16 million.

Green DiamondsCredit: Christie’s

 

Black

Black is the absorption of all light.

Fun Fact #17:

In natural diamonds, black color can be caused by the heavy presence of inclusions. Other natural black diamonds are heat treated to improve their appearance. And finally, there is another kind of black diamond which is something rather special…

Black DiamondCredit: Christie’s

 

Carbonado

This diamond material has been found in alluvial deposits in Brazil and Central Africa, in areas where there are no diamond bearing rocks. In December 2006 Astrophysicists discovered that carbonado has existed long before the Earth was born. Meaning…

Fun Fact #18:

The earth’s supply of carbonado was a special diamond delivery, crashing onto our planet from somewhere in interstellar space. Literally, from out of this world. Read more: “Meteorites and diamonds from space.“

CarbonadoCredit: Cape Town Diamond Museum

 

Space Diamonds

Fun Fact #19:

The most famous carbonado may be this 555.55 carat giant named “The Enigma.” It was sold in 2022 by Sotheby’s London for $4.3 million dollars. Read more about The Enigma.

The EnigmaCredit: Sotheby’s

 

Fancy Colored Diamond Grading

Fun Fact #20:

Unlike D-Z color grading, where the diamond is viewed upside down, through the side, fancy colored diamonds are graded against a white background, viewed from the top, assessing the stone’s appearance in three critical areas: Hue, tone, and saturation.

Colored Diamonds

 

Hue, tone and saturation

Fun Fact #21:

Hue describes the stone’s overall color. Tone and saturation work together. Tone is the lightness or darkness of the color present. As it gets lighter it becomes hard to detect. As it gets deeper or darker the hue is difficult to read. Saturation refers to the strength, purity, or intensity of the color present. Here are increasing saturations of pink from left to right. With light tone at the top and dark tone at the bottom.

Fancy Pink Diamonds

 

The Three-Dimensional Diamond Color Universe

Considered together, we use a diamond’s hue, tone and saturation to map its precise location in this three-dimensional color universe.

3D Color Universe

 

Source: International Gemological Institute