Stuller expands customizable jewelry catalog with 400 new mountings styles
Stuller added more than 400 new mountings and nearly 500 bridal options, widening the menu for couples who want faster, more specific customization at the counter.

Couples shopping for an engagement ring are getting more ways to make the piece feel personal before a center stone is even chosen. Stuller’s Mountings 2026-2027 catalog added more than 400 new mounting styles and nearly 500 bridal options, a sign that 2026 buyers want rings they can shape around budget, metal choice, and silhouette rather than settle for one fixed design.
The Lafayette, Louisiana company said the new edition is its most comprehensive mountings selection yet. It also added more than 100 updates to bestselling designs, 80 new setting components, and 30 new shank styles, details that matter at the counter because they let jewelers fine-tune a ring without starting from scratch. For shoppers, that means a closer match between the ring they imagine and the ring that actually gets made, whether the goal is a slim solitaire, a diamond band, an enhancer, or a heavier metal band.
Bridal remains the center of gravity, but the catalog also pushes customization beyond the engagement aisle. Stuller introduced new lab-grown diamond semi-set sections across fashion rings, family jewelry, and neckwear, broadening the number of pieces that can be built around a chosen stone or style story. That expansion signals where personalized jewelry is headed: not just names and initials, but more modular settings that let buyers choose how much sparkle, metal weight, and formality they want across different price points.
The pricing tools are just as revealing. Stuller added carat-weight options, 10-karat pricing in select sections, and pennyweight specifications, making it easier for jewelers to compare looks and metal content side by side. In a market where couples often want to balance sentiment with spending, those details can make the difference between browsing and buying. Stuller’s own materials describe the catalog as a response to what jewelers need, and that framing points to a bigger shift in bridal jewelry: personalization is moving from a special request to a standard expectation, with more choices available faster and in clearer steps from bench to counter.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

