Trends

Zoë Kravitz’s Georgian-style engagement ring sparks bespoke cushion-cut trend

Zoë Kravitz’s Georgian-style ring pairs an elongated cushion diamond with a button-back bezel, a look that feels antique but newly current. Custom clients are likely to ask for the same hand-finished silhouette next.

Priya Sharma··2 min read
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Zoë Kravitz’s Georgian-style engagement ring sparks bespoke cushion-cut trend
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Zoë Kravitz’s engagement ring does not read like a standard solitaire. The Georgian-style piece centers on an elongated cushion-cut diamond, set in a button-back bezel that gives the stone a clean outline and a more tailored finish than the prong-heavy rings that have dominated recent celebrity engagement news.

That combination is exactly why the ring is landing as a trend signal. The elongated cushion shape has been building momentum for two seasons, but Kravitz’s version sharpens the idea: it looks bespoke, with period references that feel studied rather than nostalgic for nostalgia’s sake. The Georgian touch matters here. Rings from that era, roughly the early 1700s through the 1830s, were often hand-crafted and used old mine or rose cuts, so the silhouette carries a history of softer proportions, refined metalwork, and a visibly made-by-hand character. Kravitz’s ring translates that language into something sleeker and more wearable today.

The details also explain why the ring feels personal. It is not the predictable round solitaire that announces itself from across a room. An elongated cushion stretches the center stone visually, while the bezel setting wraps it in yellow gold and removes the fussiness that can make antique-inspired rings look costume-like. Jill Sassone of Marrow Fine estimated the stone could be about 7 to 10 carats and described it as a yellow-gold bezel setting that feels intentional, understated and effortless. Other experts placed the stone as large as 12 carats and valued it at more than half a million dollars, a reminder that antique-coded design can still sit firmly in high-jewelry territory.

Kravitz’s ring also fits the broader shift in engagement-ring taste. She has worn elongated cushion diamonds before, including in her earlier ring from Channing Tatum, and her ring from Karl Glusman leaned antique as well. That consistency suggests a buyer who knows exactly what she wants: a center stone with softened corners, a handcrafted-looking mount, and enough historic reference to feel singular without looking stiff. For custom clients, that is the next request waiting to happen, especially as vintage and antique diamonds continue to pull celebrity-driven demand back toward old-cut proportions and away from predictable solitaires.

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