Design

Kavant & Sharart turns trapezoid diamonds into minimalist statement pieces

Kavant & Sharart makes trapezoid diamonds the focal point, pairing them with 18K yellow gold and modular silhouettes that feel sharp, compact, and wearable.

Priya Sharma··4 min read
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Kavant & Sharart turns trapezoid diamonds into minimalist statement pieces
Source: kavantandsharart.com
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Kavant & Sharart makes the trapezoid diamond do the work of a whole look. In the Mingle Trapeze collection, a shape usually tucked away as a side stone becomes the visual anchor, giving necklaces, earrings, rings, and studs a lean, architectural edge that reads as minimalist without feeling plain.

The shape that changes the silhouette

The appeal of trapezoid diamonds is how much structure they bring with so little surface area. In most jewelry, this cut plays support, not lead, often flanking a center stone in an engagement ring. Here, the geometry is pushed forward, and that reversal is what gives the collection its tension: the stones create angles, not softness, and the lines feel crisp even when the scale stays compact.

That makes the pieces especially useful if you want jewelry that registers at a glance. A round stone can be pretty; a trapezoid stone draws a cleaner path for the eye. The effect is more directional, more architectural, and more about negative space than ornament, which is exactly why the cut works so well in minimalist design.

A modular wardrobe, not a matched set

Kavant & Sharart does not present Mingle as a closed system. The brand says the line is designed to blend into an existing wardrobe, with pieces that complement, contrast, and elevate what is already there. “Mingle Jewelry was never meant to exist in isolation,” the brand says, and that idea gives the collection its practical appeal.

That philosophy matters because it keeps the jewelry from feeling over-styled. Instead of asking you to commit to a full parure, the line suggests one strong piece at a time, the kind of addition that can sit beside a slim chain, a plain band, or another geometric earring and still hold its own. The result is not a maximalist statement, but a controlled one.

Why the design language feels fresh

Kavant & Sharart is a Thai fine jewelry designer brand founded by Nuttapon Yongkiettakul and Shar-Linn Liew, and the brand’s language is rooted in geometry and modern art references. The Mingle line is framed around a “quiet interplay” of forms, textures, and light, which is a useful way to understand why the pieces feel so composed. They are built to catch attention through alignment and proportion, not through bulk.

That art-world thread runs through the broader Kaleidoscope concept and references to Kandinsky and Hilma af Klint. Those names matter because they place the collection closer to abstraction than conventional bridal jewelry. The trapezoid cut becomes not just a diamond shape, but a compositional tool, one that lets the designers think in angles, intervals, and movement.

What the collection includes

The Mingle Trapeze family spans more than one category, which reinforces the wardrobe idea. The listed pieces include necklaces, earrings, studs, a bracelet, and rings, all using the trapezoid motif as the central visual device. Several of the pieces are set in 18K yellow gold, a warm metal choice that softens the geometric severity just enough to keep the line wearable.

Key pieces include:

  • Mingle Trapeze Duo 7 Diamond Necklace, 18K yellow gold, 2.01 ct, fully articulated, 15 to 16 inch bolo necklace
  • Mingle Trapeze 15 Diamond Necklace, 1.90 ct
  • Mingle Trapeze Duo Diamond Stud Earrings, listed at 1.57 ct on one product page and 1.30 ct on another
  • Mingle Trapeze 9 Diamond Earrings, 1.95 ct
  • Mingle Trapeze Edge Diamond Bracelet, 0.30 ct
  • Mingle Pre-Stacked Trapeze Diamond Rings, 1.05 ct

That range shows how the collection scales. The bracelet keeps the diamond count restrained, while the earrings and necklaces carry more visual weight. Even so, the pieces remain compact, which is part of their appeal for anyone who wants precision rather than drama.

How the pricing reads in the market

The publicly listed pricing places the collection firmly in fine-jewelry territory. The Mingle Trapeze Duo 7 Diamond Necklace is listed at $24,800, the Mingle Trapeze 15 Diamond Necklace at $19,000, and the Mingle Trapeze Edge Diamond Bracelet at $9,900. Those numbers make clear that this is not a trend-led costume interpretation of minimalism; it is a precious-material proposition built around gold and diamonds.

The pricing also reflects how the collection distributes its value across design, articulation, and stone use rather than sheer carat weight alone. The fully articulated bolo necklace, for example, signals movement and engineering, not just surface sparkle. In minimalist jewelry, that kind of construction often matters as much as the diamond count because the line of the piece has to carry the look.

Why trapezoid diamonds work so well here

Trapezoid diamonds are especially effective in this setting because they create a sharper outline than a round or oval stone while staying visually restrained. Their geometry gives the jewelry a modernist vocabulary, and the collection uses that vocabulary to turn small proportions into strong presence. A necklace or stud does not need to be large when the shape itself already feels decisive.

That is the real appeal of Mingle Trapeze. It takes a cut usually hidden at the edge of the composition and makes it the composition itself, which gives the wearer something unusually clean, compact, and directional. In a market crowded with generic daintiness, that kind of clarity feels less like decoration and more like design.

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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