Understanding This Piece
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 Oval Cut
The oval cut is an elongated brilliant with 56–58 facets — essentially a stretched round brilliant that delivers comparable fire and sparkle in a finger-flattering elongated silhouette. Ovals have a 10–15% larger face-up surface area than rounds of equivalent carat weight, so they visually appear larger on the hand. The shape has surged to top-three popularity over the last decade, driven by celebrity engagements (Blake Lively, Hailey Bieber, Ariana Grande). The single technical consideration is 'bowtie' visibility — a dark band across the center of poorly proportioned ovals — which a well-cut stone eliminates.