Yes SIR, you made them look great!!!
I use it all the time on my round knives as a standard offering with stabilized woods as an upgrade. I love the stuff. It is super durable, good looking, easy to work, polishes up super clean and you've got a bunch of different color combinations that can appear natural to psychedelic. According to some of the old masters, the reason that Dymondwood got a bad wrap was because it was associated with Pakka wood which was the first acylic impregnated colored laminate. Apparently some of the older Pakka wood had serious voids and flaws that would only show up when you were 99% done and then WHAMO...some really ugly flaw would show up. I have never actually seen this happen on any of the hundreds I have done.
PZ