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  2. Harry Winston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Winston

    At this time it was designed to be worn as a ring or as the center stone to a bracelet set with an addition 112 smaller emerald-cut diamonds totaling 65.96 carats (13.192 g; 0.4653 oz). The McLean Diamond , a 31.26 carats (6.252 g; 0.2205 oz), blue-white colorless, antique cushion brilliant.

  3. Engagement ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engagement_ring

    The most common setting for engagement rings is the solitaire prong setting, which was popularized by Tiffany & Co. in 1886 and its six-claw prong setting design sold under the "Tiffany setting" trademark. The modern favorite cut for an engagement ring is the brilliant cut, which provides the maximum amount of sparkle to the gemstone. [46]

  4. Diamond cut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_cut

    A diamond cut is a style or design guide used when shaping a diamond for polishing such as the brilliant cut. Cut refers to shape (pear, oval), and also the symmetry, proportioning and polish of a diamond. The cut of a diamond greatly affects a diamond's brilliance—a poorly-cut diamond is less luminous.

  5. Princess cut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_cut

    Princess cut diamond set in a ring. The princess cut (technical name 'square modified brilliant') is a diamond cut shape often used in engagement rings. The name dates back to the 1960s, while the princess cut as it exists was created by Betazel Ambar, Ygal Perlman, and Israel Itzkowitz in 1980.

  6. Taylor–Burton Diamond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor–Burton_Diamond

    The original rough diamond was found in 1966 in the Premier Mine in South Africa, weighing 241 carats (48.2 g). Harry Winston cut it into the shape of a pear weighing 69.42 carats (13.884 g). [1] At the time of sale in 1969, the diamond was set in a platinum ring with two smaller diamonds on either side. [2]

  7. Golconda diamonds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golconda_diamonds

    The Heart of the Ocean, a blue diamond necklace in the film Titanic (1997), was designed by London-based jewellers Asprey & Garrard, who took inspiration from three diamonds of the French Crown Jewels known as The Regent, the Marie Antoinette Blue, and the Hope Diamond. [79] The pink, cushion-cut, 34.65-carat Princie Diamond used to be part of ...