Design

Mingle turns trapeze-cut diamonds into sculptural everyday jewelry

Mingle’s trapeze-cut diamonds turn a side-stone shape into sharp, wearable jewelry with real daily range. It is distinctive without feeling precious-only.

Rachel Levy··5 min read
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Mingle turns trapeze-cut diamonds into sculptural everyday jewelry
Source: kavantandsharart.com
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Mingle’s trapeze-cut diamonds take a shape usually reserved for the edges of a setting and make it the point of view. That shift matters because it changes more than the silhouette: it turns a supporting stone into a visual signature, the kind that reads modern at a glance and still feels usable from morning to night.

A side stone becomes the center of the story

The Mingle Trapeze collection is built on a simple but persuasive idea: use the trapeze cut, traditionally an accent stone in engagement rings and other multi-stone designs, as the main event. Instead of framing a center diamond, the shape frames the whole design language, giving rings, earrings, necklaces, and bracelets a cleaner, more graphic presence.

That approach is especially compelling for anyone who wants jewelry with personality but not fuss. A trapeze-cut stone has a directional quality that feels more architectural than a round brilliant and less expected than a princess or cushion shape. It changes how light moves across the piece, and it changes how the eye reads it: less conventional, more composed, and noticeably sculptural.

Why the shape feels so fresh

Trapezoid, or trapeze, diamonds are not a newcomer in the trade. They are commonly used as side stones in three-stone rings and similar settings, and guides note they can be brilliant-cut or step-cut. That matters because the faceting style changes the mood: a brilliant-cut version brings more sparkle, while a step-cut version emphasizes line, clarity, and geometry.

The shape is also technically demanding. Trade references point to the high level of precision and symmetry needed to cut it well, and that is part of its appeal in fine jewelry. A well-executed trapeze stone looks intentional rather than decorative, which gives even small pieces a sharper sense of value.

How Kavant & Sharart uses it

Kavant & Sharart, the Thai fine jewelry designer founded by Nuttapon Yongkiettakul and Shar-Linn Liew, is based in Bangkok and Singapore, and the brand has long leaned into an avant-garde contemporary vocabulary. A 2023 profile noted that Madonna, Katy Perry, and Greta Gerwig have worn the house, a useful reminder that this is a label with cultural cachet as well as technical ambition.

With Mingle, the brand says the collection is meant to blend into an existing wardrobe, where it can complement and contrast what you already own. That is exactly where trapeze-cut jewelry becomes interesting for everyday wear: it is distinctive enough to change a stack or neckline, but disciplined enough not to overwhelm a white shirt, a knit dress, or a tailored jacket.

The collection is presented as an extension of Kavant & Sharart’s Kaleidoscope line, with inspiration drawn from Wassily Kandinsky and Hilma af Klint. That lineage helps explain the look. These pieces do not aim for minimalism in the severe sense; they aim for movement, balance, and a sense of composition, as if the jewelry were arranged like a small abstract painting for the body.

The founders have said the trapeze cut felt “architectural yet fluid,” and that is the right phrase for the collection. The architecture comes from the stone’s geometry and crisp outline. The fluidity comes from how the pieces are articulated and worn, so the shape never feels rigid or precious-only.

What the pieces say on the body

Two pieces give a good read on the collection’s everyday usefulness. The Mingle Trapeze Edge Diamond Bracelet is listed in 18K yellow gold with 0.30 carat of diamonds and a fully articulated construction. That combination suggests a piece designed to move with the wrist rather than sit like a stiff band, which is one of the most practical ways to wear an uncommon shape daily.

The Mingle Trapeze Diamond Necklace is listed in 18K yellow gold with 1.90 carats of diamonds and a 15 to 16 inch length. That length is important because it places the necklace close to the collarbone, where the trapeze silhouette can register clearly without needing an evening neckline to support it. It has enough presence to stand alone, but it is not so long or so heavy-looking that it becomes costume-like.

Yellow gold also softens the geometry. Against 18K gold, the angular cut reads less severe and more luminous, which helps the collection cross from statement piece into repeat wear. For buyers who already own round, oval, or emerald-cut jewelry, that contrast can be the most valuable part of the purchase.

Is trapeze-cut jewelry a smart buy?

Yes, if you want a piece that looks considered rather than obvious. Trapeze-cut jewelry is not trying to outperform a center stone in the traditional sense; its value lies in how it changes the outline of a jewel and how confidently it can be worn in daily life. The shape gives you individuality, but the execution here keeps the pieces readable, balanced, and wearable.

The smartest argument for buying this cut is that it delivers visual distinction without forcing you into special-occasion behavior. A bracelet with 0.30 carat in 18K yellow gold is the sort of piece that can live among your regular rotation. A 1.90-carat necklace has more drama, but the 15 to 16 inch length and articulated construction keep it within everyday reach.

In a market full of safe silhouettes, trapeze-cut jewelry offers a more editorial answer: less familiar, more architectural, and still easy to wear. That combination is rare, and in fine jewelry, rarity is often what turns a beautiful object into a truly intelligent buy.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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