debodun
SF VIP
- Location
- way upstate in New York, USA
About 25 years ago, I took a diamond ring to a local jewelry store for an appraisal. It's the one on the right and has a center stone surrounded by 8 smaller diamonds and two more small diamonds on the edge of the platinum band (the garnet ring on the left is my mother's engagement ring). Then the jeweler said it was worth around $1500. Last year I took it to another store and the man there said, "I'll give you 80 bucks for it." I said that I didn't want to sell it, just have it appraised. He replied that $80 was all it was worth.
Now that strikes me a quite a difference. Wanting another opinion, I recently phoned a jeweler that wasn't local. After chatting with him, I learned that there are several ways to value jewelry - one is for insurance purposes and another is the wholesale value (which is what a jeweler would offer to buy it). I think the second jeweler was giving me the wholesale value. I mentioned the wide discrepancy in values I have been given. He said that I had to realize that gem and precious metals values have plummeted recently and without actually seeing the ring, it would be impossible for him to accurately value it. Anyone know how I can get the most accurate value?
Now that strikes me a quite a difference. Wanting another opinion, I recently phoned a jeweler that wasn't local. After chatting with him, I learned that there are several ways to value jewelry - one is for insurance purposes and another is the wholesale value (which is what a jeweler would offer to buy it). I think the second jeweler was giving me the wholesale value. I mentioned the wide discrepancy in values I have been given. He said that I had to realize that gem and precious metals values have plummeted recently and without actually seeing the ring, it would be impossible for him to accurately value it. Anyone know how I can get the most accurate value?