LabGlow brings expert manufacturers of Lab-Grown diamonds and diamond jewellery together with retailers to partner and purchase more efficiently. It is a global marketplace for extraordinary Lab-Grown diamond products.
Rapidly and smartly search our live database of Lab-Grown diamonds and jewellery available. LabGlow is custom designed for the specialty jewellery retail market. Allowing retailers to present the database inventory as their own to their clients makes LabGlow a valuable and efficient tool to streamline and boosts sales.
We believe in being customer-centric, boosting business for our clients through our quality products, technology and people. Our sales team is ready to offer tailored service and support on the platform. Each client will have their own dedicated account manager.
Lab-Grown diamonds, also named manmade diamonds, synthetic diamonds or cultured diamonds, share the same physical and optical characteristics of diamonds that are mined from the earth but were created in a lab.
Diamonds can be grown through the Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) or High Pressure/High Temperature (HPHT) techniques. CVD sees a small diamond seed placed in the growing chamber. The chamber is then filled with gasses whose molecular structure breaks apart under influence of heat. The carbon atoms attach to the diamond seed and layer for layer create the rough diamond crystal.
HPHT is similar to the process that takes place in the earth to form a natural diamond. By applying high pressure (HP) and high temperature (HT) to a carbon source with a diamond seed the carbon is deposited on the seed, growing the rough diamond crystal in layers.
Through either of the process, most sizes of Lab-Grown diamonds for jewellery can be created in less than a month.
Once the rough is polished, the fire, scintillation, and brilliance are identical to that of a natural diamond.
Only specialist machinery is able to distinguish between natural and Lab-Grown diamonds. It picks up on the specific characteristics created in the stones during the growth process in the laboratory.
Lab-Grown diamonds, also named manmade diamonds, synthetic diamonds or cultured diamonds, share the same physical and optical characteristics of diamonds that are mined from the earth but were created in a lab.
Diamonds can be grown through the Chemical Vapor
Deposition (CVD) or High Pressure/High Temperature
(HPHT) techniques. CVD sees a small diamond seed
placed in the growing chamber. The chamber is then
filled with gasses whose molecular structure breaks
apart under influence of heat. The carbon atoms attach
to the diamond seed and layer for layer create the
rough diamond crystal.
HPHT is similar to the process that takes place in the
earth to form a natural diamond. By applying high
pressure (HP) and high temperature (HT) to a carbon
source with a diamond seed the carbon is deposited on
the seed, growing the rough diamond crystal in layers.
Through either of the process, most sizes of Lab-Grown
diamonds for jewellery can be created in less than a
month.
Once the rough is polished, the fire, scintillation,
and brilliance are identical to that of a natural
diamond.
Only specialist machinery is able to distinguish
between natural and Lab-Grown diamonds. It picks up on
the specific characteristics created in the stones
during the growth process in the laboratory.
In addition to unlimited supply, Lab-Grown diamonds can be created in a wide range of colors. Where their natural counterparts would have an impressive price tag, Lab-Grown fancy colored diamond have the appeal without the price. This makes fancy colored Jewellery design more easily available.
Being able to purchase the same luxury as natural diamonds at an attractive price is not the only reason Lab-Grown diamonds are a success. Lab-Grown diamonds offer shoppers a differentiated story. Whether they want to express their love or mark important moments in life in a more modern and tech savvy way or the price point allows for more moments to be celebrated with diamond jewellery, lab grown diamonds offer a different angle on diamonds.