Heirloom Edits

Wedding Bands & The Wedding Stack
Wedding Bands & The Wedding Stack
The engagement ring gets all the attention, but the wedding band is the piece you'll wear every single day for the rest of your life. It deserves the same level of thought. From choosing the right profile and width, to designing a stack that works for decades, here's everything worth knowing before you commission yours.
Lab Diamond vs Natural Diamond Differences
Lab Diamond vs Natural Diamond Differences
A lab-grown diamond is chemically identical to a natural diamond: same carbon structure, same hardness, same optical properties. A gemologist cannot tell them apart without specialist equipment. So why doesn't everyone just buy lab grown? It's complicated. This is an honest breakdown of the real differences between lab and natural diamonds: what you're actually getting, what you're paying for, and what the resale reality looks like on both sides: so you can make the choice that's right for you.
How Much Should You Spend on an Engagement Ring
How Much Should You Spend on an Engagement Ring
The 'Three Months Salary' Rule Is Marketing This one is worth getting out of the way first. The idea that an engagement ring should cost three months of salary was popularised by De Beers advertising campaigns in the mid-20th century. It is a marketing invention, not a social convention with any historical depth. So we can remove that one out of the equation.  Natural Diamond or Lab Grown: This Changes Everything About Budget Before talking numbers, this is the most important decision to make, because it fundamentally changes what your budget produces. Natural diamonds carry geological rarity and the gold price parallel, they track a market, hold provenance. Lab grown diamonds are chemically and visually identical, produced in a controlled environment, and cost a fraction of the price for the same specs. Neither is the wrong answer. There's a place for both.  For natural diamonds, expect the stone to represent 70–85% of total cost. For lab grown, the stone cost drops dramatically, which means more of your budget goes toward metal, making, and quality of craftsmanship (which is exactly where it should go). For lab grown engagement rings, an absolute ceiling of around AED 18,000 is a sensible guide (most I do are around the 12K AED mark). Beyond that, you're paying a premium that the secondary market for lab grown stones won't support. Put the difference into the setting, the gold weight, and the maker. What Actually Drives Engagement Ring Cost Three components: the stone, the metal, and the making. The stone is the dominant cost in a natural diamond ring. A 1 carat round brilliant in G/VS quality commands significantly more than a 0.8 carat in the same quality: not because the visual difference is dramatic, but because carat pricing is not linear. With lab grown, that premium largely disappears, giving you access to larger, better-graded stones at accessible price points. The metal moves with the gold market, and right now gold is at a historic high. An 18K gold solitaire shank typically weighs between 3 and 5 grams, the material cost is still a fraction of the total, but it's not nothing, and it fluctuates. This is a reason to care about what gold karat you're buying, not just the stone. The making cost is the one most often sacrificed to hit a price point. A straightforward solitaire takes less time than a complex pavé setting. Bespoke commissions carry a design premium.  Engagement Ring Budgets in Dubai Dubai's fine jewellery market is broad, and budgets vary enormously: For rings with lab grown diamonds, budgets typically start around AED 6,000 and work up to around AED 18,000. That range covers a lot of ground in terms of stone size and setting complexity, and it's where lab grown makes the most sense as a category, beyond that ceiling, you're paying a premium the market won't reflect back. For natural diamonds, you're starting around AED 8,000–10,000 for a simple setting and a modest stone, with no upper limit beyond that. The sky is genuinely the limit depending on stone quality, carat weight, and setting (this is where the '4 Cs' comes in).  At any budget, the non-negotiables don't change: solid 18K gold and a certified stone. GIA for natural diamonds, IGI for lab grown.  A Word on Dubai Craftsmanship: Stone Loss This is specific to Dubai and worth saying clearly: stone loss is common here. The market runs on a small pool of shared workshops, and the cutting corners that nobody notices at point of sale often show up six months later in a loose or missing stone. Avoid martini settings, the three-claw minimal settings that might look okay on Instagram and provide the least stone retention in real wear. On a ring worn every day, they are a liability. A well-made claw setting with proper metal thickness will hold a stone for decades. A poorly made one won't. Where the Money Goes The single most impactful allocation in any engagement ring budget is stone quality over stone size. A 0.8 carat stone in a clean, well-made setting will outlook and outperform a 1.2 carat stone in an elaborate setting that dominates the visual at the expense of quality (stone depth is a HUGE thing here - where a stone might carry a lot of weight on the bottom of the stone, so it'll look small for a carat weight but you're getting sold on the cert number).  How to Get the Most for Your Budget Go slightly below round carat weights. A 0.95 carat typically costs significantly less than a 1.00 carat with no visible size difference. Reallocate the saving to cut or colour. Consider elongated cuts. An oval, pear, or marquise at the same carat weight as a round brilliant reads larger face-up. Legitimate perceived size gain without the round brilliant premium. Prioritise cut above all other grades. A well-cut stone in G/VS2 will outperform a poorly-cut D/FL in actual light performance. Cut is how the stone behaves. Everything else is what you're looking at when the light hits it.
How to Choose an Engagement Ring She'll Actually Love (Without Asking Her Directly)
How to Choose an Engagement Ring She'll Actually Love (Without Asking Her Directly)
Start With What She Already Wears The most useful intelligence is already on her hand. Not what she wears to events, what goes on in the morning and doesn't come off. That's her baseline. Is it gold or silver-toned? Delicate or substantial? Plain or detailed? Does she stack, or is she a one-ring person? Her everyday jewellery is a brief. Read it. The Metal Question Her existing jewellery almost always answers this, so don't overthink it. Yellow gold is warm, classic, but more importantly, it holds its colour without any upkeep. White gold needs periodic rhodium replating to stay bright. Platinum is denser, harder, and develops a patina over time rather than wearing through to a different colour. If she already wears mixed metals, you have latitude. If she's exclusively one metal, match it. This is not the moment to switch things up. Stone Shape Is a Style Signal Round brilliants have previously been the most popular - maximum light return, works on every hand, every setting, every aesthetic. Oval and elongated have been having a real moment in the last few years as a super popular choice. Emerald cuts are architectural and understated, they require high-quality stones because the open table hides nothing. Cushion cuts are soft and romantic. Asscher cuts are vintage-inflected and graphic. Pear shapes are having a moment and suit someone who leans expressive. If she's into clean, considered dressing: round or emerald. If her style is layered and fashion-led: oval or pear. If she loves antique and vintage references: old mine cut or Asscher. Setting Styles 101 The setting is the frame around the stone, and it determines the overall character of the ring as much as the stone itself. A solitaire: a single stone, elevated on a plain shank, is the most enduring engagement ring format. It's a declaration that the stone is the point. Everything else is in service of that stone. A pavé band adds diamonds to the shank, catching more light and adding visual weight. It reads more elaborate than a plain solitaire, and requires more maintenance over decades. A halo (smaller diamonds surrounding the centre stone) makes the centre appear larger and reads more romantic and vintage-inflected.  A bezel setting wraps the stone in metal, offering the most protection and the cleanest, most modern look. It reduces the stone's visible surface slightly in exchange for security and a lower profile. How to Get Her Ring Size Without Spoiling the Surprise Borrow a ring she already wears on her ring finger: ideally without her noticing. Take it to your jeweller, or trace it on paper and measure the inner diameter. Even an approximate size is useful: a ring can be resized after the proposal, and most jewellers offer this as a matter of course. If borrowing a ring isn't possible, ask a close friend or family member. Or make a reasonable estimate based on her general build, and tell your jeweller you're not sure. A slightly too-large ring on proposal night is better than one that won't go on.  When to Ask for Help There's no shame in bringing someone who knows her well into the process. Chances are a best friend might have a folder of images she's already sent them. A close friend, a sister, her mother: someone who has shopped with her, noticed what she gravitates toward, heard her speak about rings. Their intelligence is more useful than any style guide. And if you're genuinely unsure, a bespoke maker can design a ring that is beautiful and intentional but that leaves meaningful room for input, a stone that can be changed, a setting that can be adapted. A considered first attempt is better than a perfect result achieved by removing the surprise entirely.  Most Guys Come In With A Screenshot And that's genuinely the easiest start. She's probably already saved something, sent something to a friend, or stopped scrolling on a ring at some point. If you've got a screenshot, bring it.  If you're working with me directly, and you have no clues - between us and her instagram handle, we can work out her aesthetic. You don't need to have all the answers. That's what the process is for. I won't let you go rogue.
A curated flatlay of bespoke solid yellow gold rings displayed on a linen ring tray, featuring a mix of signet, solitaire, eternity and band styles with round, oval and emerald cut diamonds: handmade fine jewellery by Jade Romero, Dubai
The Complete Guide to Gold: 9K, 14K, 18K, Plated and Vermeil Explained
What Does Karat Mean? Karat is a measure of gold purity. Pure gold is 24 karats, 24 parts gold out of 24. In practice, pure gold can be very soft to be useful for jewellery, so it's alloyed with other metals to add durability. The karat number tells you how much of the alloy is gold. 9K gold is 37.5% gold. 14K is 58.3% gold. 18K is 75% gold. The remaining percentage is made up of silver, copper, zinc, palladium, or other metals depending on the colour and intended properties of the alloy. 9K Gold: What It Is and Who It's For:  At 37.5% purity, 9K gold is the minimum legal standard for gold jewellery in the UK and Australia. It's harder and more scratch-resistant than higher karats due to the higher alloy content, and it's significantly cheaper. The trade-off: the colour is noticeably different to higher karats: a yellower, slightly warmer tone in yellow gold, less bright in white gold. Over time, 9K gold can be more prone to tarnish in certain alloy compositions, particularly in humid climates. In Dubai, this matters. 9K is a legitimate choice for everyday pieces where budget is a significant constraint. It is not a fine jewellery standard, and it shouldn't be sold as one. 14K Gold: Real Gold for the Everyday  At 58.3% purity, 14K sits in a practical middle ground. It's more durable than 18K, slightly more affordable, and holds up well to daily wear, which makes it a genuinely good choice for everyday pieces like stacking rings, earrings, or bracelets that take a knock. The colour reads close to 18K in most alloys, and for white gold specifically, the lower gold content can actually produce a better natural colour without rhodium. For fine jewellery, and engagement rings in particular, we work in 18K. The higher gold content carries more intrinsic value, a richer colour, and the standard expected of a piece built to last a lifetime. 18K Gold: The Fine Jewellery Standard At 75% gold, 18K is the benchmark for fine jewellery. The colour is the warmest and richest of all the working karats. The material is softer than lower karats, which means it will accumulate character through wear, but structurally sound for settings and constructions that are properly made. In Dubai, 18K is what the market expects from fine jewellery. It's the standard for engagement rings, wedding bands, and any piece intended to hold stones of value. The higher gold content also means the melt value tracks the gold price more closely - relevant if you're thinking about jewellery as an asset. 22K: The Gold of the Gulf. At 91.7% purity, 22K is the gold of the Gulf. In Arab culture, gold jewellery has historically been held as a store of wealth as much as an adornment, and 22K reflects that. The colour is deep, saturated, and unmistakably gold in a way that lower karats can't replicate. It's softer and less suitable for complex stone settings, but for pieces where the gold itself is the point, it's extraordinary. It's the karat we use for our posy rings, simple, intentional bands where the material deserves to speak without distraction. 24K: The gold standard - literally. Pure gold. 99.9% and quite tricky to wear as jewellery in any practical sense, as it's too soft to hold its shape, too reactive to daily life. You'll find it in bullion, investment coins, and some decorative work. It's worth knowing about for investment, but we tend to not use in jewellery.  Gold Plated: What You're Actually Getting Gold plated jewellery is a base metal. usually brass or sterling silver, with a thin layer of gold deposited on the surface. The gold layer is typically between 0.5 and 2.5 microns thick. It looks like gold. It costs a fraction of gold. And it wears off. The timeline depends on the thickness of the plating, how often the piece is worn, and what it's exposed to but plating does not last.  Gold plated jewellery is fine for what it is: affordable, accessible, on-trend pieces with a limited lifespan. The problem is when it's priced or positioned as something more. If a piece is plated, that should be stated clearly and the price should reflect it. Gold Vermeil: Plating With a Higher Standard Vermeil (pronounced ver-may) is a specific type of gold plating over sterling silver. regulated in several countries to require at least 10K gold plating of at least 2.5 microns. It's a better product than standard plating: the base is silver rather than brass, and the gold layer is thicker. Vermeil still wears off. It still needs replating. It is still not solid gold. It's a legitimate midpoint for people who want the look of gold without the cost, but it shouldn't be confused with fine jewellery. Why Solid Gold Is the Only Real Investment Only solid gold holds its intrinsic value. Plated, vermeil, and gold filled pieces are worth their base metal at melt, which is minimal in comparison to the prices charged at retail. Solid gold pieces are worth their weight in gold, plus the making, plus the stones. If you are buying jewellery to last decades, to insure at meaningful value, to pass to someone eventually, solid gold is the category that delivers on that brief. Everything else is more in the realm of fashion jewellery, and there's nothing wrong with it as long as that's what you're buying.