RAPAPORT… De Beers will begin selling laboratory-grown diamonds under
a new fashion-jewelry brand, promising to transform the synthetics sector by
offering pieces at low cost.
The company has launched Lightbox Jewelry, which will begin
marketing a new brand of lab-grown diamond jewelry in September, it said
Tuesday. Diamonds from Lightbox will retail from $200 for a 0.25-carat stone to
$800 for 1 carat, and will include white, pink and blue diamonds set in
earrings and necklaces.
“Lightbox will transform the lab-grown diamond sector by
offering consumers a lab-grown product they have told us they want but aren’t
getting: affordable fashion jewelry that may not be forever, but is perfect for
right now,” said De Beers CEO Bruce Cleaver.
“Our extensive research tells us this is how consumers
regard lab-grown diamonds — as a fun, pretty product that shouldn’t cost that
much — so we see an opportunity here that’s been missed by lab-grown diamond
producers,” he continued.
Lightbox will offer transparency about lab-grown diamonds
that is currently lacking, added Steve Coe, the general manager of the new
brand.
“We’ve learned from our research that there is a lot of
confusion about lab-grown diamonds — what they are, how they differ from
diamonds, and how they are valued,” Coe said. “Lightbox will be clear with
consumers about what lab-grown diamonds are, and will offer straightforward
pricing that is consistent with the true cost of production.”
The brand will debut in the US, becoming available initially
to US-based consumers through Lightbox’s e-commerce website, with De Beers
planning to announce retail partnerships in due course. All its lab-grown
diamonds weighing 0.20 carats or higher will carry a permanent Lightbox logo
inside the stone that is easily visible under magnification, identifying it as
synthetic.
Element Six, De Beers’ synthetic-diamond technology company,
will produce the stones, with Lightbox being the only jewelry brand to source
lab-grown diamonds from that unit, which has been synthesizing diamonds for
industrial purposes for decades. Those years of investment in research and
development have enabled De Beers to offer lab-grown diamonds at a lower price
today, Cleaver noted.
To expand Element Six’s capabilities, De Beers will invest
$94 million over four years in a production facility near Portland, Oregon,
adding to its existing UK-based facilities. The plant will be capable of
producing at least 500,000 carats of rough synthetic diamonds per year once
fully operational, De Beers said.
Image: Matt Crabb/De Beers