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Gemesis

Gemesis Inc. was a privately held company located in New York City. The company grew synthetic diamonds using proprietary technology.

Gemesis Diamond Company
Company typePrivately held company
IndustrySynthetic diamonds
Founded1996 (relaunched in 2013 after a 2012 buyout, renamed in 2014)
FounderCarter Clarke Jr.
Headquarters,
Key people
Lisa Bissell, President and CEO[1][2]
Jatin Mehta, company buyout purchaser[2]
Suraj Mehta, relaunch founder/promoter (son of Jatin Mehta)[2][3][4]
Gary Coleman, VP of sales[5]
ProductsSynthetic diamonds
Websitehttps://www.gemesis.com/[dead link]

Gemesis had the world's largest facilities for both the high-pressure high-temperature (HPHT) and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond production methods. Using these methods, Gemesis produced high-quality colorless and fancy color diamonds that were offered for sale at 20–30% lower prices than mined natural diamonds of similar quality (and, from some suppliers, lower prices than that).[6] By about 2010, Gemesis was the principal producer of gem quality lab created diamonds and jewelry.

Gemesis started marketing its diamonds by cutting and polishing them and then selling them to jewelry retailers on the wholesale market. In 2012, the company began also selling polished diamonds and diamond jewelry directly to consumers through its website.

The company was founded by Carter Clarke Jr., a retired United States Army brigadier general and son of Carter W. Clarke, beginning as a 30,000-square-foot factory, outside Sarasota, Florida.[7] It was purchased in early 2012 by diamond industry businessman Jatin Mehta. After allegations of impropriety among some of the company's principals arose in 2012, the company was restructured and refounded in 2013 with Mehta's son Suraj Mehta at the helm and with part or all of the company assets transferred to a new company that was still known as "Gemesis". A new CEO was appointed[8] and the company was renamed to Pure Grown Diamonds in June 2014.[1][9] The new company became a diamond reseller that does not manufacture the gems themselves.

Production process edit

There are two well established methods of synthetic diamond creation – CVD and HPHT. Gemesis used elements of both – growing diamonds by HPHT after creating smaller ones by CVD.[10][11] This contrasts with the method used by its primary diamond gemstone competitor of the 2000–2010 era, Apollo Diamond, which its grew gemstones using only CVD.[12]

In the HPHT diamond-growing method that was used by Gemesis, carbon, in graphite form, was placed in a cylindrical "core". A tiny CVD seed diamond was placed at the bottom of the cylinder. The graphite was then subjected to extreme pressure, 850,000 lbf/in² (5.9 GPa) and temperature, 3,000 °F (1,650 °C) for four days. As the diamond was grown, the carbon atoms within the molten metal would crystallize on top of the seed diamond. In Gemesis' process, a yellow gem-quality diamond up to 3 carats (600 mg) in size would grow inside the resolidified metal cylinder. The metal cylinder would then be dissolved in mild acid and the diamond crystal would be extracted.

With the addition or elimination of certain impurities under controlled conditions, diamonds of various color types could be produced. Since nitrogen is abundant in the atmosphere, the HPHT process was more likely to produce bright yellow diamonds than any other color (although natural yellow diamonds often have higher value than white diamonds). The yellow tint occurs when approximately five out of each 100,000 carbon atoms in the diamond crystal lattice are replaced with nitrogen atoms.

Available in the purest Type IIa colorless and rare fancy yellow colors, the company's diamonds have basically identical chemical, optical and physical characteristics as the highest-quality mined diamonds and can also have the same type of cut, color and clarity for gemstone purposes.

Company history edit

1996–2012 edit

Gemesis was founded in 1996 by Carter Clarke, a retired United States Army brigadier general. In 2006, Stephen D. Lux became its chief executive officer. Lux had substantial prior experience in the diamond industry.

The company announced in November 2010 that it planned to begin offering gemstone-quality colorless diamonds for sale on the internet, and ultimately launched its website to do so in March 2012.[13]

The business was not profitable, partly due to the high cost of developing the diamond production process to a point where sufficient production volume was feasible, and the original investors basically lost their entire investments.[14] The company was heading toward bankruptcy in 2010 when diamond industry businessman Jatin Mehta stepped in with an investment of $US8.4M in exchange for a controlling interest in the firm.[15] Mehta reportedly bought out the remaining shareholders in early 2012 and restructured the company, initially renaming it from Gemesis Corporation to Gemesis Diamond Company.[15][2][3][14] Mehta also moved the company's diamond production operations from Florida to Malaysia and made moves designed to legally separate and protect the company's intellectual property.[15] The company restructuring was sufficiently confusing that the well-known industry analyst Chaim Even-Zohar published a report in May 2012 entitled "The Mystery Of Two Gemesis Companies Under One Hat".[15]

2012 incident involving undisclosed synthetic stones and Lux departure edit

In May 2012, the news emerged that a parcel of 600 unmarked synthetic diamonds had been submitted by a buyer to the International Gemological Institute (IGI) diamond certifying agency for evaluation, without any accompanying disclosure that they were synthetic.[10][11] The DTC Diamond Research Center issued an alert and said the undisclosed synthetics were "strikingly similar" in their characteristics to Gemesis diamonds, and a trade journal said the synthetics and Gemesis diamonds had "identical characteristics" and "had the specific Gemesis fingerprint".[11] The diamonds had been grown by CVD and then treated by HPHT, and thus their production required both technologies. It was noted that all of the stones in the parcel were synthetics – there was no mixing to hide synthetic stones among natural ones. The buyer of the parcel said the 600 diamonds were only a sampling from a collection that was four or five times larger.[11]

The IGI alleged that impurities and flaws in the synthetic stones had been intentionally introduced in order to create the appearance that they were of natural origin, concluding that the stones had been "created to defraud".[15]

The invoices for the diamonds were traced to a company called Su-Raj Diamonds and Jewelry USA in New York that was co-owned by Jatin Mehta, the majority owner of Gemesis, along with a junior partner named Ashok Bhansali.[11] The same company was reported to house the central inventory of diamonds for Gemesis itself.[11] Stephen Lux responded to the reports by saying "Gemesis can assure the industry with 100 percent certainty that it has not been involved in selling its diamonds as mined, and the undisclosed diamonds referenced in the DTC and IGI alerts are not Gemesis diamonds."[11] Jatin Mehta then reportedly suggested it was possible that Bhansali "had misappropriated stocks held previously by the partnership" or that "some people who had left Gemesis … might have stolen our technology and are thus producing our typical Gemesis characteristic goods", and showed that the Su-Raj parent company (a large publicly listed company based in India and also known as Winsome Diamonds or Jewellery USA[15][16]) had taken some steps to sever its ties with its New York subsidiary (although the degree to which the separation had taken effect was unclear).[11]

In December 2012, Stephen Lux reportedly resigned from his position as the company's CEO. Lux said that internal issues at the company and "distractions" (speculated to include the reports of undisclosed synthetic diamonds) had recently made it difficult for him to focus on his goals for building the business.[17] However, Lux later sued the company, alleging that he had not actually resigned but rather had been terminated, and claiming wrongful termination of his employment.[15][18] Lux also alleged that the company had not actually been purchased by Jatin Mehta directly, but instead had been sold to a company named Power Capital Ventures Ltd (PCV) in 2012.[15]

Disputes over the incident lasted until at least 2017, when Su-Raj filed a complaint with the Supreme Court of New York against its broker, Sterling Diamonds, Inc.[19]

Milestone achievements 2013–2014 edit

Gemesis created the world's largest lab-created diamond in April 2013, broke that record in November 2013, and then broke the record again in July 2014. The first was a 1.29 carat emerald cut, the second was a princess cut at 1.78 carat,[20] and the third was a 3 carat round brilliant white Type IIa diamond.[4]

Rebranding in 2014 edit

In June 2014, Gemesis named a new CEO, Lisa Bissell, and re-branded itself as "Pure Grown Diamonds".[9][8][1] At the time, Bissell said "The new name reinforces our commitment to disclosure and transparency."[8] Suraj Mehta said he had been looking for a person to fill the role after re-founding the company in 2013.[8]

In the wake of the company's restructuring, Jeweller magazine reported that "Gemesis' rebranding and its strong emphasis on transparency could be perceived as an effort to dissociate from previous speculation and confusion." It referred to the May 2012 discovery of undisclosed synthetic diamonds and said that past reports from the company had "caused confusion regarding the status of the company's ownership and operations".[18] The company's 2014 press releases referred to the company as having been founded in 2013, although Gemesis had been in existence since 1996.[18]

Marketing strategy edit

The company highlighted several advantages of its diamonds over those produced by natural processes:

Diamonds over 0.23 carats sold via Gemesis.com were laser inscribed to identify their origin and were certified by industry authorities such as the International Gemological Institute.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Graff, Michelle (June 30, 2014). "Gemesis rebrands as 'Pure Grown Diamonds'". National Jeweler.
  2. ^ a b c d Bates, Rob (June 26, 2014). "Diamond grower Gemesis announces new president, CEO". JCK. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  3. ^ a b . Diamond Intelligence Briefs. October 11, 2012. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Bates, Rob (July 24, 2014). "3 Carat Synthetic Colorless Diamond Produced – Largest-Ever Grown Gem". JCK. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  5. ^ Contact page August 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine on Pure Grown Diamonds official website.
  6. ^ Bates, Rob (May 22, 2012). "Will Synthetic Diamonds Cause a Crisis of Confidence?". JCK. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  7. ^ Davis, Joshua. "The New Diamond Age". Wired.
  8. ^ a b c d Graff, Michelle (June 24, 2014). "Gemesis names Lisa Bissell as president, CEO". National Jeweler.
  9. ^ a b . Gemesis. June 26, 2014. Archived from the original on December 10, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
  10. ^ a b Bates, Rob (June 8, 2012). "About that Parcel of Undisclosed Synthetic Diamonds". JCK. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Even-Zohar, Chaim (May 30, 2012). (PDF). Diamond Intelligence Briefs. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  12. ^ Yarnell, Amanda (February 2, 2004). "The Many Facets of Man-made Diamonds". Chemical & Engineering News. Retrieved July 19, 2021.
  13. ^ Bates, Rob (March 13, 2012). "Colorless Synthetic Diamonds Are Being Sold on the Internet (Finally)". JCK.
  14. ^ a b Bates, Rob (October 16, 2012). "The Problem with Lab-Grown Diamonds". JCK. Retrieved August 2, 2015.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Lord, Nick (April 1, 2013). "Lab-created diamond debate heats up". Jeweller.
  16. ^ Budan, Gulam Shaik (February 21, 2018). "In L'Affaire Nirav Modi, Echoes of Jatin Mehta's Winsome Diamonds Where a Dead-End Is Looming". The Wire.
  17. ^ Bates, Rob (December 18, 2012). "Gemesis CEO Stephen Lux Resigns". JCK. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  18. ^ a b c Chan, Stephanie (July 1, 2014). "New identity for synthetic diamond company". Jeweller.
  19. ^ "Diamond Intelligence Briefing – Issue 894–895". DIB Online. November 7, 2017.
  20. ^ Craft, Christie (November 19, 2013). "Gemesis Expands Synthetic Diamond Offerings". JCK. Retrieved February 13, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Davis, Joshua (September 2003). "The New Diamond Age". Wired.
  • Davis, Joshua (February 2007). "Updata: Lab-Grown Diamonds Make the Cut". Wired.
  • Even-Zohar, Chaim (May 22, 2012). . The Israeli Diamond Industry Portal. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
  • Joseph, Josy (August 20, 2014). "Did top defaulter divert Rs 6,500 crore loan funds abroad". The Times of India.

External links edit

gemesis, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citati. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gemesis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Gemesis Inc was a privately held company located in New York City The company grew synthetic diamonds using proprietary technology Gemesis Diamond CompanyCompany typePrivately held companyIndustrySynthetic diamondsFounded1996 relaunched in 2013 after a 2012 buyout renamed in 2014 FounderCarter Clarke Jr HeadquartersNew York City United StatesKey peopleLisa Bissell President and CEO 1 2 Jatin Mehta company buyout purchaser 2 Suraj Mehta relaunch founder promoter son of Jatin Mehta 2 3 4 Gary Coleman VP of sales 5 ProductsSynthetic diamondsWebsitehttps www gemesis com dead link Gemesis had the world s largest facilities for both the high pressure high temperature HPHT and chemical vapor deposition CVD diamond production methods Using these methods Gemesis produced high quality colorless and fancy color diamonds that were offered for sale at 20 30 lower prices than mined natural diamonds of similar quality and from some suppliers lower prices than that 6 By about 2010 Gemesis was the principal producer of gem quality lab created diamonds and jewelry Gemesis started marketing its diamonds by cutting and polishing them and then selling them to jewelry retailers on the wholesale market In 2012 the company began also selling polished diamonds and diamond jewelry directly to consumers through its website The company was founded by Carter Clarke Jr a retired United States Army brigadier general and son of Carter W Clarke beginning as a 30 000 square foot factory outside Sarasota Florida 7 It was purchased in early 2012 by diamond industry businessman Jatin Mehta After allegations of impropriety among some of the company s principals arose in 2012 the company was restructured and refounded in 2013 with Mehta s son Suraj Mehta at the helm and with part or all of the company assets transferred to a new company that was still known as Gemesis A new CEO was appointed 8 and the company was renamed to Pure Grown Diamonds in June 2014 1 9 The new company became a diamond reseller that does not manufacture the gems themselves Contents 1 Production process 2 Company history 2 1 1996 2012 2 2 2012 incident involving undisclosed synthetic stones and Lux departure 2 3 Milestone achievements 2013 2014 2 4 Rebranding in 2014 3 Marketing strategy 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksProduction process editThere are two well established methods of synthetic diamond creation CVD and HPHT Gemesis used elements of both growing diamonds by HPHT after creating smaller ones by CVD 10 11 This contrasts with the method used by its primary diamond gemstone competitor of the 2000 2010 era Apollo Diamond which its grew gemstones using only CVD 12 In the HPHT diamond growing method that was used by Gemesis carbon in graphite form was placed in a cylindrical core A tiny CVD seed diamond was placed at the bottom of the cylinder The graphite was then subjected to extreme pressure 850 000 lbf in 5 9 GPa and temperature 3 000 F 1 650 C for four days As the diamond was grown the carbon atoms within the molten metal would crystallize on top of the seed diamond In Gemesis process a yellow gem quality diamond up to 3 carats 600 mg in size would grow inside the resolidified metal cylinder The metal cylinder would then be dissolved in mild acid and the diamond crystal would be extracted With the addition or elimination of certain impurities under controlled conditions diamonds of various color types could be produced Since nitrogen is abundant in the atmosphere the HPHT process was more likely to produce bright yellow diamonds than any other color although natural yellow diamonds often have higher value than white diamonds The yellow tint occurs when approximately five out of each 100 000 carbon atoms in the diamond crystal lattice are replaced with nitrogen atoms Available in the purest Type IIa colorless and rare fancy yellow colors the company s diamonds have basically identical chemical optical and physical characteristics as the highest quality mined diamonds and can also have the same type of cut color and clarity for gemstone purposes Company history edit1996 2012 edit Gemesis was founded in 1996 by Carter Clarke a retired United States Army brigadier general In 2006 Stephen D Lux became its chief executive officer Lux had substantial prior experience in the diamond industry The company announced in November 2010 that it planned to begin offering gemstone quality colorless diamonds for sale on the internet and ultimately launched its website to do so in March 2012 13 The business was not profitable partly due to the high cost of developing the diamond production process to a point where sufficient production volume was feasible and the original investors basically lost their entire investments 14 The company was heading toward bankruptcy in 2010 when diamond industry businessman Jatin Mehta stepped in with an investment of US8 4M in exchange for a controlling interest in the firm 15 Mehta reportedly bought out the remaining shareholders in early 2012 and restructured the company initially renaming it from Gemesis Corporation to Gemesis Diamond Company 15 2 3 14 Mehta also moved the company s diamond production operations from Florida to Malaysia and made moves designed to legally separate and protect the company s intellectual property 15 The company restructuring was sufficiently confusing that the well known industry analyst Chaim Even Zohar published a report in May 2012 entitled The Mystery Of Two Gemesis Companies Under One Hat 15 2012 incident involving undisclosed synthetic stones and Lux departure edit In May 2012 the news emerged that a parcel of 600 unmarked synthetic diamonds had been submitted by a buyer to the International Gemological Institute IGI diamond certifying agency for evaluation without any accompanying disclosure that they were synthetic 10 11 The DTC Diamond Research Center issued an alert and said the undisclosed synthetics were strikingly similar in their characteristics to Gemesis diamonds and a trade journal said the synthetics and Gemesis diamonds had identical characteristics and had the specific Gemesis fingerprint 11 The diamonds had been grown by CVD and then treated by HPHT and thus their production required both technologies It was noted that all of the stones in the parcel were synthetics there was no mixing to hide synthetic stones among natural ones The buyer of the parcel said the 600 diamonds were only a sampling from a collection that was four or five times larger 11 The IGI alleged that impurities and flaws in the synthetic stones had been intentionally introduced in order to create the appearance that they were of natural origin concluding that the stones had been created to defraud 15 The invoices for the diamonds were traced to a company called Su Raj Diamonds and Jewelry USA in New York that was co owned by Jatin Mehta the majority owner of Gemesis along with a junior partner named Ashok Bhansali 11 The same company was reported to house the central inventory of diamonds for Gemesis itself 11 Stephen Lux responded to the reports by saying Gemesis can assure the industry with 100 percent certainty that it has not been involved in selling its diamonds as mined and the undisclosed diamonds referenced in the DTC and IGI alerts are not Gemesis diamonds 11 Jatin Mehta then reportedly suggested it was possible that Bhansali had misappropriated stocks held previously by the partnership or that some people who had left Gemesis might have stolen our technology and are thus producing our typical Gemesis characteristic goods and showed that the Su Raj parent company a large publicly listed company based in India and also known as Winsome Diamonds or Jewellery USA 15 16 had taken some steps to sever its ties with its New York subsidiary although the degree to which the separation had taken effect was unclear 11 In December 2012 Stephen Lux reportedly resigned from his position as the company s CEO Lux said that internal issues at the company and distractions speculated to include the reports of undisclosed synthetic diamonds had recently made it difficult for him to focus on his goals for building the business 17 However Lux later sued the company alleging that he had not actually resigned but rather had been terminated and claiming wrongful termination of his employment 15 18 Lux also alleged that the company had not actually been purchased by Jatin Mehta directly but instead had been sold to a company named Power Capital Ventures Ltd PCV in 2012 15 Disputes over the incident lasted until at least 2017 when Su Raj filed a complaint with the Supreme Court of New York against its broker Sterling Diamonds Inc 19 Milestone achievements 2013 2014 edit Gemesis created the world s largest lab created diamond in April 2013 broke that record in November 2013 and then broke the record again in July 2014 The first was a 1 29 carat emerald cut the second was a princess cut at 1 78 carat 20 and the third was a 3 carat round brilliant white Type IIa diamond 4 Rebranding in 2014 edit In June 2014 Gemesis named a new CEO Lisa Bissell and re branded itself as Pure Grown Diamonds 9 8 1 At the time Bissell said The new name reinforces our commitment to disclosure and transparency 8 Suraj Mehta said he had been looking for a person to fill the role after re founding the company in 2013 8 In the wake of the company s restructuring Jeweller magazine reported that Gemesis rebranding and its strong emphasis on transparency could be perceived as an effort to dissociate from previous speculation and confusion It referred to the May 2012 discovery of undisclosed synthetic diamonds and said that past reports from the company had caused confusion regarding the status of the company s ownership and operations 18 The company s 2014 press releases referred to the company as having been founded in 2013 although Gemesis had been in existence since 1996 18 Marketing strategy editThe company highlighted several advantages of its diamonds over those produced by natural processes Lower prices Alleviating concerns about the environmental impact of mining Alleviating concerns related to the potential purchase of conflict or blood diamonds Diamonds over 0 23 carats sold via Gemesis com were laser inscribed to identify their origin and were certified by industry authorities such as the International Gemological Institute See also editList of synthetic diamond manufacturersReferences edit a b c Graff Michelle June 30 2014 Gemesis rebrands as Pure Grown Diamonds National Jeweler a b c d Bates Rob June 26 2014 Diamond grower Gemesis announces new president CEO JCK Retrieved August 2 2015 a b Jatin Mehta New Global Gem Quality Synthetic Diamond Czar Diamond Intelligence Briefs October 11 2012 Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved July 18 2021 a b Bates Rob July 24 2014 3 Carat Synthetic Colorless Diamond Produced Largest Ever Grown Gem JCK Retrieved August 2 2015 Contact page Archived August 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine on Pure Grown Diamonds official website Bates Rob May 22 2012 Will Synthetic Diamonds Cause a Crisis of Confidence JCK Retrieved August 2 2015 Davis Joshua The New Diamond Age Wired a b c d Graff Michelle June 24 2014 Gemesis names Lisa Bissell as president CEO National Jeweler a b Gemesis Inc Rebrands Itself as Pure Grown Diamonds Gemesis June 26 2014 Archived from the original on December 10 2014 Retrieved December 10 2014 a b Bates Rob June 8 2012 About that Parcel of Undisclosed Synthetic Diamonds JCK Retrieved August 2 2015 a b c d e f g h Even Zohar Chaim May 30 2012 Exposing the Fraudulent Undisclosed Synthetic Diamond Trail PDF Diamond Intelligence Briefs Archived from the original PDF on September 24 2015 Retrieved August 2 2015 Yarnell Amanda February 2 2004 The Many Facets of Man made Diamonds Chemical amp Engineering News Retrieved July 19 2021 Bates Rob March 13 2012 Colorless Synthetic Diamonds Are Being Sold on the Internet Finally JCK a b Bates Rob October 16 2012 The Problem with Lab Grown Diamonds JCK Retrieved August 2 2015 a b c d e f g h Lord Nick April 1 2013 Lab created diamond debate heats up Jeweller Budan Gulam Shaik February 21 2018 In L Affaire Nirav Modi Echoes of Jatin Mehta s Winsome Diamonds Where a Dead End Is Looming The Wire Bates Rob December 18 2012 Gemesis CEO Stephen Lux Resigns JCK Retrieved February 13 2014 a b c Chan Stephanie July 1 2014 New identity for synthetic diamond company Jeweller Diamond Intelligence Briefing Issue 894 895 DIB Online November 7 2017 Craft Christie November 19 2013 Gemesis Expands Synthetic Diamond Offerings JCK Retrieved February 13 2014 Further reading editDavis Joshua September 2003 The New Diamond Age Wired Davis Joshua February 2007 Updata Lab Grown Diamonds Make the Cut Wired Even Zohar Chaim May 22 2012 The Mystery of Two Gemesis Companies Under One Hat The Israeli Diamond Industry Portal Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Joseph Josy August 20 2014 Did top defaulter divert Rs 6 500 crore loan funds abroad The Times of India External links editOfficial website dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gemesis amp oldid 1168252016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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