Chelsy Davy reveals sapphire engagement ring in rare anniversary post
Chelsy Davy’s rare anniversary post offered a close look at a £40,000 sapphire trilogy ring, a geometric alternative to the classic diamond solitaire.

Chelsy Davy’s rare anniversary post offered something far more compelling than a family snapshot, a close look at the sapphire-and-diamond engagement ring that has quietly set her apart from the usual celebrity solitaire. The Instagram image, shared as she marked four years of marriage to Sam Cutmore-Scott, showed him asleep on a sofa beside baby Finn, with Davy’s caption reading, “4 years, 3 kids, 2 very tired people .”
The ring itself is the kind of jewel that rewards a second glance. Described as a deco-style trilogy design, it centers on a 3.00-carat emerald-cut sapphire, flanked by kite-cut diamond side stones, then stacked beside an infinity wedding band. The effect is crisp and architectural rather than overtly romantic, with the sapphire doing the visual heavy lifting. Its deep color gives the ring presence, while the emerald cut sharpens the silhouette and the geometric diamonds keep the composition taut and modern.
That is what makes the ring feel adventurous. A white-diamond solitaire is the safest path in engagement jewelry, but Davy’s choice leans into color, contrast, and proportion. The sapphire reads as deliberate rather than decorative, and the kite-cut shoulders add a sharper, more unexpected edge than the round or pear side stones seen on many celebrity rings. Even the stack with the infinity band adds to the story, turning the engagement ring into part of a layered, personal jewelry language rather than a single isolated token.

Jewellery experts valued the piece in a broad range of about £15,000 to £40,000-plus, depending on the sapphire’s quality and origin. That spread says as much about the colored-stone market as it does about the ring itself: in sapphire jewelry, provenance can change the equation dramatically, and a cleaner, more saturated stone will always command a stronger price. The estimate also places the ring in a more attainable tier than many headline-grabbing celebrity diamonds, even as its design feels more individual than most.
Davy has always made that balance between polish and personality look easy. The Zimbabwe-born founder of Aya Jewels, which she launched in 2016, studied economics at the University of Cape Town and law at the University of Leeds before building a career around jewelry. She dated Prince Harry on and off from 2004 to 2011, but her own ring tells a different story now, one shaped by marriage to Sam Cutmore-Scott, a secret engagement before their 2022 wedding, and three children, Leo, Chloe, and Finn, born in March 2026. In an arena crowded with predictable diamonds, Davy’s sapphire remains memorable because it looks chosen, not prescribed.
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