Stuller’s new mountings catalog adds 400 bridal styles, expands lab-grown options
Stuller’s latest mountings book packs more than 400 new styles, nearly 500 bridal options, and bigger lab-grown sections into a single line-up.
Stuller has shifted the bridal mounting conversation from sheer volume to architecture. Its Mountings 2026–2027 catalog adds more than 400 new styles, nearly 500 bridal options, 80 new setting components and 30 new shank styles, the kind of inventory that changes how a ring is built, not just how it is priced.
The most commercially meaningful change is in the parts buyers never see first: shanks, setting components and semi-set foundations. Those updates make it easier to move customer requests for hidden halos, wider bands, cathedral shoulders and mixed-metal details out of the custom-only lane and into stock offerings. Stuller also added more than 100 updates to bestselling designs, a sign that the company is not just chasing novelty but refining proven silhouettes for 2026 and 2027.

The bridal section now spans engagement rings, diamond bands, enhancers and metal bands, while new lab-grown diamond semi-set sections extend into fashion rings, family jewelry and neckwear. That matters because the same consumer appetite driving lab-grown engagement rings is now influencing the broader bridal and gifting mix. Stuller also added 10-karat pricing in select sections, new carat-weight options and pennyweight specifications, details that make it easier for retailers to steer clients between entry-level budgets and more metal-heavy, substantial builds.


The company announced the catalog from Lafayette, Louisiana, on April 13, and framed the update as a response to retailer feedback. It is also part of a longer rollout: Stuller released its first dedicated lab-grown diamond jewelry catalog in April 2024, followed by Bridal 2025–2026 in May 2025 with more than 700 new styles. Taken together, the sequence shows where bridal design is heading next. The ring clients ask for is becoming more modular, more metal-conscious and more adaptable to lab-grown stones, with the smartest showroom assortments likely to be the ones that can pivot between classic solitaire language and more sculptural, vintage-leaning profiles without losing commercial reach.
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