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Amanda Gizzi Spotlights 14 Aquamarine Birthstone Jewels for March

Amanda Gizzi’s “Aquatopia” gathers 14 aquamarine jewels that lean into the stone’s calming, spring-forward spirit, though some item details warrant closer verification.

Priya Sharma6 min read
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Amanda Gizzi Spotlights 14 Aquamarine Birthstone Jewels for March
Source: nationaljeweler.com

Amanda Gizzi curates “Amanda’s Style File: Aquatopia,” a National Jeweler edit dated March 03, 2026, that centers on aquamarine as March’s primary birthstone and showcases 14 recent jewels from designers and maisons across price points. The selection is presented visually with image assets dated 20260302 (20260302-1 through 20260302-14), and the piece frames aquamarine as a calm, spring-forward hue: “These aquamarine jewels channel the calming energy of the March birthstone.”

A social teaser for the Style File appeared on Instagram as well, with the partial caption: “Dive into Aquatopia with this edition of Amanda's Style File, featuring March's birthstone, aquamarine. With a name that means “water of the””, the supplied excerpt is truncated and worth checking for the full copy when sourcing social text and credits. Below I walk through the 14 items highlighted by Gizzi, anchoring each entry to the exact image label used in the gallery and flagging the verification points a careful buyer should follow.

Future Fortune (image: 20260302-1_Future Fortune.jpg) Future Fortune is the first image in the Amanda’s Style File sequence and establishes the edit’s visual narrative on March 2, 2026. The file name 20260302-1_Future Fortune.jpg ties it to the gallery; National Jeweler places this piece among the 14 aquamarine jewels that “channel the calming energy of the March birthstone.” For collectors, the presence of Future Fortune at the top of the set signals a contemporary approach to aquamarine styling, but sourcing and certification details were not provided on the page and should be requested from the retailer before purchase.

Isabel Delgado (image: 20260302-2_Isabel Delgado.jpg) “Isabel Delgado aquamarine earrings are one of 14 jewels in this Amanda’s Style File highlighting aquamarine.” That exact line appears in the supplied material and confirms the designer’s inclusion. The image asset 20260302-2_Isabel Delgado.jpg anchors this entry to the gallery. Given Isabel Delgado’s penchant for artisanal settings, ask for gem reports and metalwork details (metal karat, soldering methods, and any plating) so you can assess durability alongside beauty.

Jacquie Aiche (image: 20260302-3_Jacquie Aiche.jpg) Jacquie Aiche appears in the third image slot (20260302-3_Jacquie Aiche.jpg), but the supplied product name on the page reads “Jacquie Aiche Raw Amethyst Cluster Starburst Diamond Ring,” which contains “amethyst”, not aquamarine. This inconsistency is explicit in the source material and should be treated as a red flag for editorial clarity and buyer due diligence. Confirm whether the Jacquie Aiche image in the aquamarine set actually depicts an aquamarine piece or whether the page mixed assets; request the piece’s stone ID and any laboratory report.

Karma El Khalil (image: 20260302-4_Karma El Khalil.jpg) Karma El Khalil is listed as image 20260302-4_Karma El Khalil.jpg and is included among the 14 featured jewels. The gallery placement suggests a designer-led interpretation of aquamarine’s calming palette. As with the other entries, the National Jeweler page links the brand to Gizzi’s Aquatopia edit but does not publish stone weights, treatment disclosures, or origin statements, details a buyer should obtain for peace of mind and long-term value.

Lauren K (image: 20260302-5_Lauren K.jpg) Lauren K appears in the fifth slot (20260302-5_Lauren K.jpg). The inclusion underscores the range, from independent designers to storied houses, represented in Gizzi’s selection. For Lauren K pieces, where craftsmanship and curb appeal often intersect, ask whether the aquamarine is natural and if any clarity-enhancing heat treatments are disclosed; those are common in the trade and materially affect valuation.

Mellerio (image: 20260302-6_Mellerio.jpg) Mellerio, appearing as 20260302-6_Mellerio.jpg, brings historic maison gravitas to the set. The piece’s presence in a gallery described as spanning “designers and maisons across price points” signals a mix of heritage and contemporary examples. Buyers seeking a legacy name should request provenance details and see whether Mellerio provides archival documentation or in-house gem reports for older pieces.

Oscar Heyman (image: 20260302-7_Oscar Heyman.jpg) Listed as 20260302-7_Oscar Heyman.jpg, Oscar Heyman’s image is part of Gizzi’s Aquatopia sequence. The house is represented within the 14-piece narrative that frames aquamarine as spring-forward and calming. Given Oscar Heyman’s bench-driven craftsmanship, insist on documentation of the metal’s fineness and any hallmarking, alongside a gemological report for the aquamarine itself.

Pamela Froman (image: 20260302-8_Pamela Froman.jpg) Pamela Froman is captured by 20260302-8_Pamela Froman.jpg in the gallery. Her inclusion emphasizes the edit’s breadth across independent makers. For small-batch or atelier jewelry, verify construction methods and post-sales repair policies, especially for delicate aquamarine cuts and settings.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Picchiotti (image: 20260302-9_Picchiotti.jpg) Picchiotti appears as 20260302-9_Picchiotti.jpg and represents the luxury-atelier strand of the edit. The brand’s presence among the 14 jewels underlines the spectrum from artisanal to high-jewelry interpretations of aquamarine. When a maison appears in such a curatorial set, request lab reports (for example, GIA or AGL) and any certification of ethical sourcing the house provides.

Renato Cipullo (image: 20260302-10_Renato Cipullo.jpg) Renato Cipullo occupies 20260302-10_Renato Cipullo.jpg in the gallery. His inclusion continues Gizzi’s narrative of designer variation. For designers like Renato Cipullo, confirm whether stones are natural or treated, and whether the piece has maker’s marks or limited-edition documentation that affect collectability.

Sanamama (image: 20260302-11_Sanamama.jpg) Sanamama is shown in 20260302-11_Sanamama.jpg and is one of the 14 items Amanda Gizzi highlights. Small brands often bring singular design language to a birthstone edit; to evaluate Sanamama’s aquamarine offerings, request explicit disclosure on the gem’s origin, any enhancements, and the metal composition.

Sean Gilson (image: 20260302-12_Sean Gilson.jpg) Sean Gilson appears as 20260302-12_Sean Gilson.jpg. Workshop-driven pieces in an aquamarine edit can vary widely in finish and technique; ask for close-up imagery and maker notes that document prong count, bezel style, and soldering specifics so you know how the stone is being held and protected.

Sunlit (image: 20260302-13_Sunlit.jpg) Sunlit occupies 20260302-13_Sunlit.jpg, rounding toward the end of the gallery. The brand’s name aligns with the airy, water-inflected character of aquamarine that Gizzi foregrounds. For Sunlit items, request treatment disclosures and whether the company provides third-party gemological verification for the aquamarine’s identity.

Vivaan (image: 20260302-14_Vivaan.jpg) Vivaan closes the gallery as 20260302-14_Vivaan.jpg and completes the set of 14 jewels. Its placement in the Amanda’s Style File ties Vivaan to the curated narrative of aquamarine’s calming, spring-forward allure. As with the other entries, provenance, treatment disclosure, and lab reports are the essential data points missing from the page that buyers should obtain.

    Practical provenance and certification checklist

  • Request a gemological report (GIA, AGL, or equivalent) that identifies the stone and lists any treatments.
  • Ask sellers to document metal content (karat, hallmark), construction notes, and repair policies.
  • For maison and atelier pieces, request provenance or archival numbers when available; for independent designers, ask for maker marks and production details.

Editorial note on inconsistencies and verification The National Jeweler edit and accompanying image filenames (20260302-1 through 20260302-14) clearly present a 14-piece Aquatopia gallery curated by Amanda Gizzi. At the same time, the supplied page includes product names elsewhere, most notably “Jacquie Aiche Raw Amethyst Cluster Starburst Diamond Ring,” as well as mentions of an “Akiva Gil garnet ring” and “Jenna Blake diamond Fan earrings”, that are not aquamarine. That mismatch is explicit in the source material and underscores the need to verify each image and caption before treating every item as an aquamarine jewel.

Closing Amanda Gizzi’s Aquatopia is a tidy visual argument for aquamarine’s calm, spring-forward charisma, assembled across designers and maisons and presented with image assets dated 20260302 and a byline on March 03, 2026. “These aquamarine jewels channel the calming energy of the March birthstone,” the piece declares; for buyers who want beauty without compromise, the next step is concrete documentation, stone reports, treatment disclosure, maker and metal details, and provenance, so that the serene blue you wear is also certified and traceable.

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