Diamond Simulant Names: What Is a Fake Diamond Called?
cubic zirconia

Diamond Simulant Names: What Is a Fake Diamond Called?

The respectful industry term is diamond simulant. Explore moissanite, cubic zirconia, white sapphire, white topaz, and Satéur Gems® — real gemstones with t

brillianceReal vs fake diamond shine — Satéur editorial hero with open orange box

Real vs Fake Diamond Shine: What the Light Actually Shows

How does real diamond shine differ from simulants? Understand brilliance, fire, and dispersion — and why the choice is simpler than the industry suggests.

diamond alternativesSatéur Destinée Ring beside open orange Satéur box on espresso dark marble

How to Tell If a Diamond Is Fake — Visual & Optical Guide

Learn how to distinguish a real diamond from a simulant using optical properties, light behaviour, and certification. Includes what to look for with the na

cubic zirconiaDiamond Simulant: What It Is and How It Compares

Diamond Simulant: What It Is and How It Compares

Discover what a diamond simulant is, how it differs from lab-grown diamonds, and why Satéur Gems® delivers diamond-accurate brilliance at 1% of the price.

cubic zirconiaDiamond Look Alike Stones: The Complete Guide | Satéur

Diamond Look Alike Stones: The Complete Guide | Satéur

A clear guide to diamond look alike stones — Satéur Gems®, moissanite, white sapphire, and cubic zirconia — with specs, price tiers, and durability compare

cubic zirconiaDiamond substitute — Satéur Gems® ring in open orange box on travertine

Diamond Substitute: Best Alternatives to Mined Diamonds

A clear guide to diamond substitutes — moissanite, Satéur Gems®, cubic zirconia, and white sapphire — their durability, appearance, and true value.

cubic zirconiaSatéur Gems diamond simulant ring in winter loft — simulated diamond meaning

Simulated Diamond Meaning — What Diamond Simulants Are

Simulated diamond meaning explained: how diamond simulants differ from mined stones, their optical properties, durability specs, and why they cost 1% of th

El Nuevo Estándar de Diamantes®

Satéur® — El Anillo del 1%®

Parece un diamante de 10.000 dólares. Cuesta solo el 1%.
Un nuevo estándar de brillo — definido por claridad, no por convencionalismos.
Parece un diamante de $10,000, pero cuesta menos que una noche de diversión. Satéur está cambiando las reglas del compromiso.
Lo colocamos junto a un diamante real y no pudimos distinguir la diferencia. Satéur podría ser el brillo más inteligente en la joyería.
Satéur no solo vende anillos. Está creando un movimiento para parejas que buscan significado por encima del precio.