Jessie Cave’s marquise engagement ring revives a vintage bridal trend
Jessie Cave’s ring softens the marquise cut with round diamond clusters and rose gold, turning a once-polarizing shape into something far more playful.

Jessie Cave’s engagement ring takes one of the most opinionated diamond shapes in bridal jewelry and makes it feel almost easy to wear. The marquise outline is there, but instead of a stark, solo stone, the design gathers four round-cut diamonds at the center with two smaller side accents, all set on a rose-gold band, a composition that reads softer, more romantic and less severe than the classic pointed silhouette.
Cave announced the engagement on Instagram on April 12, 2026, alongside comedian Alfie Brown, with the caption, “12 years and 4 kids later … it’s getting serious.” The moment carried its own built-in narrative: Cave and Brown have been together for more than 12 years and share four children, Donnie, Margot, Abraham and Becker, which gives the ring a family-history weight that suits its intimate, slightly offbeat design.

The marquise cut has long been a shape of strong opinions. The Gemological Institute of America notes that marquise diamonds were especially popular in bridal jewelry in the 1970s, then slipped out of favor as princess cuts surged by the beginning of the 21st century. That arc matters here, because Cave’s ring does not simply revive a vintage shape, it loosens it. By breaking the marquise into clustered round stones rather than presenting a single, sharply pointed center stone, the design tempers the cut’s drama and replaces it with movement.
That approach also changes how the stone reads on the hand. GIA says marquise diamonds can look larger face-up than round diamonds of the same carat weight, and that they can make fingers appear longer and more slender. In Cave’s setting, those familiar marquise benefits are still present, but the rose-gold band and the clustered layout shift the mood toward whimsy rather than formality. The result is a ring that keeps the flattering geometry of a marquise while softening its edges enough for someone who wants vintage charm without a heavily traditional look.
For readers weighing their own engagement-ring style, Cave’s ring draws a clear line. If you want the cleanest, most conventional marquise silhouette, a single centered stone will give you that unmistakable needlepoint profile. If you want vintage character with a little more romance, a clustered marquise treatment like this one offers a gentler, more playful route. It is the kind of design that makes a once-divisive cut feel newly approachable.
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