Henan Yinwang Trade Co., Ltd

Henan Yinwang Trade Co., Ltd export synthetic diamonds such as high grade HTHP diamonds and CVD diamond. Website:http://www.cnsyntheticdiamond.com/products_detail/&productId=21.html

RVD powder for cutting and grinding toolsIf you have the need for this ,please cantact me.skype:jasonlucky88Email:grtjas...
22/07/2014

RVD powder for cutting and grinding tools

If you have the need for this ,please cantact me.
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What is an Unforgettable Diamond Ever?The one you are never to forget or want to part with, aren’t you? While celebritie...
18/07/2014

What is an Unforgettable Diamond Ever?

The one you are never to forget or want to part with, aren’t you? While celebrities are fighting for getting the rarest and most expensive diamond to boast, for someone the meaning but not the size is a matter or a great concern. The diamond that is associated with the most sweet moments of you life and a loved person may priceless. Would you like to find more about that diamond or get one? Read the article below:

Turning the dead into diamond – it may sound a bit dark, but it’s now possible to transform the ashes of the cremated deceased into a diamond–a jewel truly to remember.

Using “Russian technology,” Algordanza Memorial Diamonds are created in a similar fashion to the way natural diamonds are formed.

Here’s how it works: a diamond is composed of pressurized carbons. Conveniently enough, human bodies are about 18 percent carbon. Using about a pound of ashes, the firm is able to distill out the carbon and use it to form a man-made diamond in a mold under high pressure in about a week. The diamonds created this way are often blue because of certain chemicals in the human body.

Algordanza, headquartered in Switzerland, offers a variety of diamond sizes and cuts that can be placed on a ring or other jewelry pieces. Prices run higher than conventional diamonds, starting from about $3,000 depending on the size and cut.

The resulting diamond will be “an everlasting keepsake, remembrance, or heirloom to pass to future generations,” Frank Ripka, CTO of Algordanza, told BusinessInsider.

LifeGem, based in Elk Grove Village, Ill., calls itself the original inventor and says it holds the U.S. patent for memorial diamonds. In a year, the company has “generally about a thousand customers worldwide,” a spokesperson from LifeGem told ABCNews.com.

LifeGem’s popular products, the company says, include the colorless LifeGem because it looks like the diamonds to which the public is accustomed. Blue diamonds are also in demand, the company says, because it is “difficult to get a blue diamond from nature.”

Diamond prices have fluctuated in recent years. From 2011 through 2012, overall prices for rough and polished diamonds declined by 14 percent and 13 percent, respectively, according to Bain & Company’s Global Diamond Report 2013.

Could Algordanza Memorial diamonds be more worth than a natural diamond because of their sentimental value? Or is it a macabre product?
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Are Diamonds Still a Popular Present for Valentine’s Day?No secret that the most popular V-Day presents are sweets, flow...
17/07/2014

Are Diamonds Still a Popular Present for Valentine’s Day?

No secret that the most popular V-Day presents are sweets, flowers, cards and jewelry. Even though the jewelry is in the bottom of the list but the spendings it involves are larger than for the previous three put together. However the prognosis for revenue from jewelry stores for Valentine’s Day 2014 are not that optimistic. Diamond retailers expect lower sales rate in comparison with the previous year. Want to know why? Here is the answer:

The National Retail Federation (NRF) determined that U.S. consumers are not ready to splurge as much on jewelry for Valentine’s Day 2014 as they had one year ago. The NRF estimated that total spending on gifts would reach $17.3 billion, with an average budget of $133.91 for those who celebrate the festival. However, only 19 percent of those who participate plan to purchase jewelry this year, down from 19.7 percent in 2013, and the NRF estimated that jewelry sales would approach $3.9 billion this year compared with $4.4 billion one year ago.

Nearly half of those surveyed plan to purchase candy, while 37.3 percent expect to purchase flowers, 51.2 percent plan to buy a greeting card and 37 percent anticipate spending their budget on an evening out. Prosper Insights and Analytics, which conducted the survey for the NRF, determined that 54 percent of U.S. consumers would celebrate Valentine’s day this year, but that figure is down from 60 percent in 2013. The survey also discovered that 26.1 percent of shoppers plan to purchase gifts online this year, the same percentage from one year ago.

“Valentine’s Day will continue to be a popular gift-giving event, even when consumers are frugal with their budgets. This is the one day of the year when millions find a way to show their loved ones they care,” said NRF’s president, Matthew Shay. “Consumers can expect Cupid’s holiday to resemble the promotional holiday season we saw just a few months ago, as retailers recognize that their customers are still looking for the biggest bang for their buck.”

Of those who intend to spend on gifts, the survey revealed that the average man would budget $108.38 for gifts for his significant other and women would budget $49.41 on someone special. Additionally, consumers planned to show their affection with a gift for family members, friends, teachers, pets and colleagues.

Pam Goodfellow, the director of Prosper Insights, added, “While fewer are planning to celebrate Valentine’s Day this year, millions of shoppers will still make room in their discretionary budgets to send cards and gifts to loved ones or enjoy a special evening out. Consumers can expect promotions on everything from flowers to date night dinner packages in the coming days, leaving plenty of ideas for those looking to spoil their Valentines.”

Diamonds Help in Treating Heart DiseasesThe idea of using diamonds for industrial needs is as old as age. Moreover, more...
16/07/2014

Diamonds Help in Treating Heart Diseases
The idea of using diamonds for industrial needs is as old as age. Moreover, more than 80 % of mined diamonds are used industrially since only a small part of natural stones are suitable for use as gemstones. The experts are looking for a larger spectrum of ways to implement diamonds in other spheres of life of humans. Medicine is one of them. This is the story of how diamonds helped to prolong the life of a 75-aged lady:

Susan Sperling, 75, had no history of heart disease, so when she started having chest pains that came and went, she didn’t think much of it.

“If I would stop walking, it would stop; so I guess I didn’t take it seriously enough,” said Sperling. “I really waited too long to see a doctor.”

Sperling continued to have pain for six weeks before finally seeing her doctor for an electrocardiogram (EKG), which revealed a 95 percent blockage in her main coronary artery. Sperling’s doctor referred her to Dr. Samin Sharma, director of clinical and interventional cardiology at The Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, who determined she would need stents placed in the artery to prop it open.

“We dilate the blockage with a balloon, and then we put [in] a stent; so all the plaque remains behind the stent,” said Sharma. “But in some cases, it needs to be removed, because otherwise … the stent will not open up or expand.”

Coronary artery disease affects more than 16 million people in the United States. Calcium in the arteries is relatively common in aging patients, but certain conditions like liver or kidney disease and diabetes can increase an individual’s risk of developing it.

Because the plaque buildup on the walls of Sperling’s artery was calcified, Sharma performed a coronary atherectomy procedure to remove the plaque before placing her stent.

“Some studies actually have shown that once you have a heavily calcified blockage, and you don’t do the atherectomy, your complications actually are higher,” said Sharma.

Coronary atherectomy has been around for more than 20 years, but the technology used to perform it has been complex, leading some doctors to opt for open heart surgery to remove large blockages. But new technology called the Diamondback 360 Coronary Orbital Atherectomy System was recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the method is making it easier and safer for patients to undergo the procedure.

The system uses a rotating diamond-coated crown fed up through a catheter to sand away calcified plaque without blocking the artery.

Sperling was back on her feet a day after surgery, and she said she is grateful doctors caught her coronary artery disease in time.

“If you feel these, anything like this, take care of it right away,” she said. “If it turns out that it’s nothing, it’s nothing. You didn’t lose anything. But you can lose a lot if you wait too long.”
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