http://www.npr.org/2014/01/19/263128098/swiss-company-compresses-cremation-ashes-intodiamonds
From Ashes To Ashes To Diamonds: A Way To Treasure The Dead
5:17 AM
Most of the diamonds synthesized from cremated
remains come out blue, due to trace amounts of boron in the body. These
diamonds, made from the ashes of animals, were created through the same process
used to make diamonds from human remains.
Courtesy
Rinaldo Willy/Algordanza
Diamonds are
supposed to be a girl's best friend. Now, they might also be her mother, father
or grandmother.
Swiss
company Algordanza takes cremated human remains and — under high heat and
pressure that mimic conditions deep within the
Earth — compresses them into diamonds.
Rinaldo
Willy, the company's founder and CEO, says he came up with the idea a decade
ago. Since then, his customer base has expanded to 24 countries.
Each year, the
remains of between 800 and 900 people enter the facility. About three months
later, they exit as diamonds, to be kept in a box or turned into jewelry.
Most
of the stones come out blue, Willy says, because the human body contains
trace amounts of boron, an element that may be involved in bone
formation. Occasionally, though, a diamond pops out white, yellow or close to
black – Willy's not sure why. Regardless, he says, "every diamond from
each person is slightly different. It's always a unique diamond."
Most of the orders
Algordanza receives come from relatives of the recently deceased, though some
people make arrangements for themselves to become diamonds once they've died.
Willy says about 25 percent of his customers are from Japan.
At between $5,000
and $22,000, the process costs as much as some funerals. The process and
machinery involved are about the same as in a lab that makes synthetic diamonds
from other carbon materials.
The basic process reduces the ash to
carbon, then slides it into a machine that applies intense heat and pressure —
for weeks. That's at least several hundred million years faster than diamonds
are made in nature.
"The more time
you give this process, the bigger the rough diamond starts to grow," Willy
says. After the new diamond cools off, the crystal is ground and cut to shape, and sometimes
engraved with a laser.
It only takes about a pound of ashes
to make a single diamond, Willy says. His company has created up to nine
diamonds from one individual's ashes.
Algordanza isn't
the only company blinging out the afterlife, either. An American company called
LifeGem offers the same services, and there are a number of U.S. patents for
similar procedures.
Most of the time, Willy says, people
take the diamonds to a jeweler to be made into rings or pendants.
"I don't know why, but if the
diamond is blue, and the deceased also had blue eyes, I hear almost every time
that the diamond had the same color as the eyes of the deceased," says
Willy, who personally delivers the diamonds to his Swiss customers.
Each time, he says, the family is happy
that their loved one has, in a sense, returned home. And in sparkling form to
boot.

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