How high jewellers reimagined classic bridal gems in 2022, from coloured diamonds like J. Lo’s engagement ring by Rahaminov, to Tiffany & Co.’s platinum rings and Boucheron’s minimalist series
- The spring/summer shows at Couture Fashion Week in Paris saw plenty of dreamy bridal gowns … and sparkling modern takes on classic bridal jewellery too
- Mikimoto went the more traditional route with feminine pearls, Chaumet’s tiaras took inspiration from Napoleon’s wife Empress Joséphine, and you can’t go wrong with Graff’s bow motif
Geneva-based Boghossian turns its classic diamond encrusted band on its head with a touch of gem-setting ingenuity in the Merveilles Bridal collection, cleverly setting diamonds along the sides to leave barely any metal in sight in its eternity bands, bridal rings, short drops and hoop earrings.
“In our bridal line, an abundance of light flows through each gem, representing the infinite love between two soul mates. We are setting the gems in designs that will surprise and astonish,” says Roberto Boghossian, managing partner at Boghossian. Besides diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds also take centre stage in Merveilles bridal rings.
British jeweller David Morris, meanwhile, celebrates the special moment by elevating the classic single halo diamond rings and three-stone settings with fancy pink round diamonds and fancy intense yellow oval diamonds tucked onto dreamy rings. Cushion-cut diamonds, and old favourites rubies and sapphires, are set with prongs or accented with a diamond halo to add extra sparkle. White pear-shaped diamonds – a fancy shape and a popular choice for bridal rings – let you nimbly try something different to the traditional. Then take your pick from their dainty tiaras encrusted with diamonds and you are sorted for the big day.