Sette launches playful Hot Girl Pickles pinky ring in 18k gold
Sette turned Hot Girl Pickles into a $2,000 pinky ring in 18k gold, set with a 1-carat fancy green lab-grown diamond. Early orders also came with a jar of pickles.

Sette turned Hot Girl Pickles into a $2,000 pinky ring, casting 18k gold in a far less formal light. The Hot Girl Pinky Ring pairs a 1.0-carat IGI-certified fancy green lab-grown pear-shaped diamond with a half-bezel setting and a scalloped band in 18k yellow or white gold, a build that keeps the joke anchored in real fine-jewelry craft.
The Dallas-based jeweler launched the collaboration on June 25, 2026, and made the piece to order with a 4-6 week lead time. Orders placed between June 22 and June 26 included a complimentary jar of Hot Girl Pickles, and the product page listed a ship-by date of July 29, a small but telling nod to the brand’s shareable, internet-native pitch.
Isabel Rooney said the partnership was meant to meet “Hot Girl Summer” energy and create a ring women could “put on and never take off.” She also said green is one of the hardest colors to execute in lab-grown diamond jewelry, which makes the stone more than a punchline. Sette works exclusively in lab-grown diamonds, and the choice of a fancy green pear shape gives the ring a brighter, more collectible profile than a standard solitaire could deliver.
Sette frames the collaboration as an extension of its best-selling Coquette pinky ring, which is where the smart merchandising lives. The pickles are the headline, but the structure is what gives the piece staying power: a stackable format, a recognizable silhouette and a stone color that is unusual enough to feel fresh without drifting into costume. At $2,000, it sits in the range where a buyer is paying for the diamond, the gold and the idea.
Good Girl Snacks gives the joke its own backstory. Founded by Leah Marcus and Yasaman Bakhtiar in summer 2023, the company introduced Hot Girl Pickles in February 2024 after spotting pickle trends on TikTok. Its brand story ties the snacks to Middle Eastern flavors and a Gen Z sensibility, which helps explain why the collaboration reads less like a novelty and more like two brands speaking the same internet dialect in different materials.
Early social reactions followed that logic, with comments calling the ring “amazing” and “best collab of the year.” The appeal is not that Sette made a pickle-shaped trinket, but that it turned a joke into a wearable object with enough gold, stone weight and polish to hold its own in a stack.
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