Design

Rio Grande launches 120-style bridal line for layered pairing

Rio Grande’s first finished bridal line spans more than 120 styles, pairing solitaires and filigree looks with matching bands in gold or platinum.

Rachel Levy··2 min read
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Rio Grande launches 120-style bridal line for layered pairing
Source: nationaljeweler.com
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Rio Grande has stepped into finished bridal jewelry with a collection built for pairing, not piecing together from scratch. The company’s first bridal line includes more than 120 engagement-ring and wedding-band styles, with coordinating sets in yellow gold, white gold, rose gold and platinum. The range runs from classic solitaires to ornate filigree designs, giving retailers a broader bridal case that can move from proposal ring to wedding band to later additions with far less guesswork.

That structure matters in a category where the look of a ring stack can hinge on small but decisive details: metal color, band profile and how closely the pieces sit together on the hand. Rio Grande’s website now promotes bridal sets with expertly paired engagement rings and matching wedding bands, a format that favors clean combinations over improvisation. For shoppers building layered wedding jewelry, the advantage is immediate. A matched set makes it easier to extend the story with an anniversary band, a slim spacer or a second band that complements the original rather than competing with it.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The launch also marks a deeper push into personalization and finished jewelry. Rio Grande’s wholesale program offers select customization services, natural and lab-grown diamonds, gold materials and support with melee and matched pairs of both natural and lab-grown gemstones. It also provides custom jewelry manufacturing and made-to-order ring services, a mix that lets retailers serve customers who want a bridal piece to feel individual without moving fully into one-off design. Arien Gessner has said personalization continues to drive consumer purchasing decisions, especially in bridal and self-purchasing categories.

Rio Grande has tied that view to a broader bridal shift. In a June 22, 2026 trend piece, the company said brides are increasingly looking for bands that reflect individual tastes, stories and lifestyles, while anniversary bands, stackable styles and milestone additions are becoming part of the purchase journey. The new line arrives as Rio Grande, a division of Richline Group since 2013, has been spotlighting its expanded finished-jewelry business through JCK 2026 in Las Vegas and through a dual-booth presence. Based in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the company is now positioning bridal as part of a wider assortment that includes both natural and lab-grown diamonds across silver, gold and platinum.

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