When colourless is boring

***Pls note that the jewellery featured in this particular post is not by Heritage Gems. 

Coloured gemstone engagement rings have long been used among royalty and Old Money as a profession of their love for each other.

Wallis Simpson, Duchess of Windsor with a stunning 19.77ct emerald engagement ring. Truly a gem piece:

Image Image

Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon with her Ruby engagement ring surrounded by diamonds

Image

In more current times, royalty engagement such as Princess Diana’s 18ct stunning blue sapphire ring to which Kate Middleton was subsequently proposed to by Prince William are definitely redefining engagement ring traditions.

diana

the_most_expensive_celebrity_engagement_rings_640_21

Stunning blue sapphire engagement ring – If it’s good enough for Prince William and Kate Middleton, I’m sure it would be good enough for any of us.

2b09087ec3731b1627b29a24d77c37a2

Princess Mathilde of Belgium’s beautiful oval ruby engagement ring

mariechantalfrombrideuniverse

Marie-Chantal of Greece’s Cabochon Sapphire engagement ring

sarahruby

Fergie’s Oval Ruby engagement ring

jackieo-1024x724

Jacqueline Onassis’s emerald engagement ring

And in even more recent times, amongst Hollywood celebs, coloured gemstones engagement rings have become popular

halleberry-1024x676

Halle Berry’s 4ct emerald engagement ring. Beautiful and unique – estimated to be worth USD200,000.

lizhurley-1024x714

Elizabeth Hurley elegant and classic emerald shape blue sapphire stunner. As mentioned in a previous post, fancy cut side diamonds (regardless of shape) always command a premium than round brilliant side diamonds/setting size diamonds.

jessicasimpson-1024x657

Jessica’s ruby engagement ring, again, with fancy cut side diamonds.

nicolerichie-1024x768

Nicole Richie’s Pink Sapphire engagement ring – a colour for the little girls inside every one of us.

Contrary to mainstream opinion, coloured gem engagement rings is only for the privileged few. Fine quality precious gemstones are rare and not easily available. If one has a specific colour/shade/hue in mind, the waitlist to lay your hands on an ideal gem could be several months, sometimes close to a year. If your jeweller is actively searching the market for you, it may take a slightly shorter timeframe.

Nonetheless, buying that ideal precious gem is not something that you can pick off a chart with the corresponding colour grading, clarity grading as you would a diamond.

Leave a Reply