Understanding This Piece
About Garnet
Garnet is a family of related minerals occurring in nearly every color — most commonly deep red (almandine and pyrope) but also bright green (tsavorite), orange (spessartine), and color-changing varieties. Garnet scores 6.5–7.5 on Mohs (durable for daily wear) and has been used in jewelry since ancient Egypt. It's the January birthstone and 2nd-anniversary gem. Red garnet often displays a deeper, more wine-toned red than ruby and offers a meaningful price advantage.
About 14K Rose Gold
14K rose gold gets its romantic pink hue from a copper-rich alloy — typically around 25% copper combined with silver. The color is warm, slightly less intense than 10K rose, and ages beautifully without tarnishing or requiring rhodium replating. Rose gold has been a defining engagement-ring trend of the last decade, pairing especially well with morganites, peach sapphires, and oval and cushion-cut diamonds. It flatters most skin tones and reads as both vintage and modern.
About the Three-Stone Setting
A three-stone setting features a center diamond flanked by two matched side stones — symbolizing past, present, and future in modern engagement-ring tradition. The side stones are typically smaller versions of the center diamond shape (or contrasting shapes like trillions or pear cuts flanking a round). Three-stone settings carry strong heirloom value and were popularized in modern times by Meghan Markle's engagement ring. They visually present a larger overall footprint than a solitaire of equivalent center weight.