Design

Almor Designs Unveils New Paraíba Collection Highlighting Electric Blue Tourmalines

Centurion’s February 26 gallery from Great Neck, NY spotlights a GIA‑certified 10‑carat oval Paraíba tourmaline set in polished 18K white gold with 2ct of white diamonds and 1ct of fancy-shaped Cadillac Diamonds.

Priya Sharma2 min read
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Almor Designs Unveils New Paraíba Collection Highlighting Electric Blue Tourmalines
Source: news.centurionjewelry.com

Centurion’s product gallery posted February 26, 2026 showcases Almor Designs’ new Paraíba collection, highlighting electric blue Paraíba tourmalines set in polished 18K white gold. The gallery identifies a headline piece as a 10‑carat oval Paraíba tourmaline that "includes a GIA certificate," positioned in a ring described as surrounded by "2ct of sparking white diamonds and 1ct of fancy shaped Cadillac Diamonds."

The featured 10‑carat ring is presented with specific metal and weight details: an 18K white gold mounting and a 10‑carat oval center stone, flanked by a total of 2 carats of white diamonds and 1 carat of Cadillac‑described accent stones. The gallery file name for the image is Almor_Designs_Paraiba_ring.png and the posting originates from Great Neck, NY, according to the Centurion page navigation.

While the gallery copy celebrates vivid color and design, it leaves key provenance and grading details unlisted. The listing states only that "This 10-carat oval Paraiba tourmaline includes a GIA certificate" but does not provide a GIA report number, a scan of the certificate, or a link to the laboratory report. The surrounding diamonds are quantified as 2ct and the Cadillac accents as 1ct, but no diamond cut, color, clarity grades, or country-of-origin and traceability information are published alongside the product gallery.

The page preserves several brand phrases verbatim, including that the gallery "spotlights vibrant Paraíba tourmalines set in polished 18K white gold with surrounding white diamonds and fancy-shaped accent stones" and the idiosyncratic line "This ring protrudes true Paraiba Color and energy to learn more contact Almor Design." That latter sentence appears run together and uses unconventional capitalization, and the gallery does not publish a direct contact phone, email, or a full corporate name clarification beyond the brand headings "Almor Designs" and a singular "Almor Design" mention.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Context on the Centurion page reinforces that product galleries sit alongside industry ad content and editorial items; adjacent links include "Previous article: Mountz Jewelers Adds De Beers Traceable Diamonds to Bridal Collection" and a range of sidebar ads such as "Frederic Sage Ad" and "Precision Set Ad." The juxtaposition highlights how traceability and ethical sourcing are active topics on the same editorial page even though Almor’s gallery itself provides no sourcing statements for the Paraíba tourmalines or for the "Cadillac Diamonds."

Almor Designs’ new Paraíba collection clearly emphasizes visual impact and traditional luxury materials - a GIA‑backed 10‑carat center, 18K white gold mounting, and more than 3 carats of accompanying diamonds by total weight. Without published GIA report numbers, diamond grades, or sourcing disclosures, however, the collection’s documentation remains incomplete for connoisseurs and collectors who require certification and provenance to assess long‑term value. Until Almor supplies the missing certificate numbers and diamond specifications, the pieces read as striking showpieces rather than fully documented investment‑grade jewels.

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