LONDON - Sue Rogers will never be without her dead dogs and cat after having
a diamond ring made from their ashes.
 This photo released by LifeGem in October 2005 shows a
diamond made from the ashes of cremated remains. Sue Rogers from Devon
will never be without her dead dogs and cat after having a diamond ring
made from their ashes. [AFP]
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Rogers, from Devon in southwest
England, paid 3,200 pounds (4,800 euros, US$6,238) for the ring made from carbon
extracted from the ashes of Lucky, an old English sheepdog, a golden retriever
cross called Sam and a tom cat, Patch, a newspaper said Saturday.
"I am delighted with my ring as it means I can have my pets with me at all
times," Rogers told the Daily Mail newspaper.
"My animals meant the world to me and even though they are gone they are
still with me. It's a beautiful ring and such a brilliant idea."
Rogers, 44, had previously kept the ashes of her pets on her mantelpiece
until she learnt of LifeGem UK, which makes diamonds from the remains of humans
and pets.
A small amount of carbon from each set of ashes was heated at temperatures of
3,000 degrees Celsius to help make a rough diamond.
The stone was then polished and certified before being set in a gold band.