Gracie Hunt’s engagement ring blends family legacy, faith and custom design
An elongated cushion-cut diamond, two emeralds and a Bible verse turned Gracie Hunt’s ring into a family heirloom in the making.

Gracie Hunt’s engagement ring was built around more than sparkle. The center stone is an elongated cushion-cut diamond, but the detail that gives the piece its emotional weight is the jeweler behind it: Scott Polk of Lyles DeGrazier in Dallas, the same master jeweler who helped design the engagement ring Clark Hunt gave Tavia Shackles.
That kind of continuity is rare in modern bridal jewelry, where the urge can be to chase scale alone. Here, the design carried family memory in the making. Hunt said Derek Green helped shape the ring with Lyles DeGrazier, and that the family connection made it feel more meaningful and tied to her own story. The band is set with two emeralds, a subtle nod to Green’s last name, which gives the ring a tailored finish without overpowering the diamond.
The proposal took place on Friday, April 3, 2026, in Mexico during an Easter trip that had been planned months in advance so both families could spend time together. Hunt, 27, and Green, the son of former Chiefs quarterback Trent Green, shared the news on Instagram the next day. Hunt said she and Green had reconnected at Arrowhead Stadium in 2017, then went public with their relationship in May 2025 before the engagement followed about a year later.
The ring also carries faith in a way that feels personal rather than ornamental. Hunt said Green engraved one of her favorite Bible verses inside the band, and the couple referenced Romans 8:28 in their engagement announcement. That detail matters because it shifts the ring from a single event into a private record of what the couple says anchors the relationship.
For readers thinking about custom bridal jewelry, the takeaway is clear: meaning lands best when it is built into the structure of the piece, not layered on as decoration. A family jeweler, a stone shape chosen for presence, a band accented with a symbolic color, and an inscription that only the couple can see can give an engagement ring the kind of permanence that feels inherited from the start.
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