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Pharrell Williams spotlights men’s ring stacking with diamond bands

Pharrell Williams turned a gold wedding band into a stack, pairing it with a larger east-west diamond ring and echoing Helen Lasichanh’s own bridal ring look.

Rachel Levy··2 min read
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Pharrell Williams spotlights men’s ring stacking with diamond bands
Source: tiffany.com
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Pharrell Williams gave men’s wedding jewelry a far less restrained silhouette when he paired a traditional gold band with a larger diamond ring on his ring finger. The combination created a stacked look that echoed the bridal ring finger, but with a sharper, more individual edge.

The pairing felt intentional because it mirrored the jewelry worn beside him by Helen Lasichanh, whom Williams married in 2013. His diamond appeared larger than hers and was set east-west across the finger, while Lasichanh’s ring looked like a three-row diamond design on a thin band. Williams also wore a signet ring on his right ring finger, adding another layer to a look that read as curated rather than incidental. The family detail matters too: Williams and Lasichanh have four children, and the rings looked like part of a long-running visual language between them.

That language now fits neatly into where bridal jewelry is headed. A January 2025 Yahoo shopping piece described ring stacking as a new bridal standard, and 2025 Natural Diamonds trend guidance for men points to narrower bands, mixed metals, dark finishes, diamond accents and textured designs. Williams’ stack lands squarely in that lane. It takes the familiar men’s wedding band and gives it the same compositional logic women have long used to build a bridal stack, where the band, the center ring and the proportions all matter as much as the stones themselves.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Williams is especially potent as a style signal because he has already helped normalize more adventurous fine jewelry through Tiffany Titan by Pharrell Williams. Introduced in 2024 as a 19-piece unisex collection, the line was built in 18-karat gold, black titanium and diamonds, with spiked motifs and rings that use a prong-less setting language to make the stones appear to hover. That background makes his own rings feel less like a one-off celebrity flourish and more like a continuation of the same design worldview.

For men, the takeaway is immediate: a wedding ring no longer has to stop at one plain band. Gold can sit beside diamonds, a signet can join the mix, and the most modern versions are moving toward slimmer, more architectural profiles that feel closer to jewelry design than convention.

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