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How to Use the Cremains to Make a Diamond?

This is a kind of new way in memory of family members-using the cremains to make a diamond, which refers the purpose that can make the dearest person "immortal" .

From: iAbrasive.comDate: 2015-08-27 08:03:51Views: 424

This is a kind of new way in memory of family members-using the cremains to make a diamond, which refers the purpose that can make the dearest person "immortal". A British company specializes in extracting diamonds from cremains or hair. They need only 100 grams, or 2 grams of hair, and the carbon 100% can be extracted to make a diamond. These diamonds are often made into rings or necklaces wearing in the family members to memorize their lost love.

Who learned of the curriculum of high school physics will know that the rough diamond of natural diamond in nature is diamond. It is a kind of elemental crystals made of carbon. The content of the elements only accounts for 0.5%-2% in the cremains, while the hair contains about 30-50% of carbon, which is why the hair can also be used to replace the cremains. Therefore, turning ceramins into diamonds is not magic.

As a gift full of customer emotion, they are different from ordinary products, and customers often put forward some additional requirements. For example, some customers have a requirement for lab visit, and they can make an appointment to visit through the company's staff, and then the laboratory personnel will guide the entire process.

The company's customer service Oliver said: "In our team in every one's heart, this is not a normal job. This if for love and we all hope it will forever. We want to help people in their own way to commemorate their relatives."

The diamond service has quickly been used in the United States, Japan, Canada, Australia, Portugal, a dozen countries and regions. Company's core service spirit is "Personal Service" (personalized custom services). These two simple words, representing a kind of spirit that runs through every detail of the whole service process.

Although the diamond service has attracted a lot of onlookers, but Oliver said: "We are actually a lab fostering diamond with extraction of carbon material, and we are not limited in the funeral industry. What we really want to provide is diamond made of hair, not cremains. About using the cremains to make a diamond, we sincerely hope they never become our customers."

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