Understanding This Piece
About Citrine
Citrine is yellow-to-orange quartz, the warm-toned sibling of amethyst. Most commercial citrine is heat-treated amethyst from Brazil; natural untreated citrine is rarer and commands higher prices. The color ranges from pale lemon to deep Madeira amber. Citrine scores 7 on Mohs (suitable for daily wear) and is the November birthstone and 13th-anniversary gem. It's one of the most accessible yellow gemstones in fine jewelry and pairs beautifully with both yellow and rose gold.
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 Channel Settings
A channel setting holds accent diamonds in a continuous metal track — typically along the top of a wedding band or eternity band — without individual prongs between stones. The smooth, snag-free profile is ideal for daily wear and gives the band a clean architectural line. Channel-set diamonds are particularly secure (held by the channel walls themselves) and require less maintenance than pavé or shared-prong settings.