Amorati Asymmetrical Flower Ring
Celebrate the beautiful contrasts of your unique story with the Amorati Twin Bloom Ring, the crown jewel of our Signature Collection. This piece reimagines the classic floral emblem through a modern, avant-garde lens, creating a visual harmony between two distinct "blooms."
Unlike traditional symmetrical rings, the Twin Bloom features an intentional "dance" of light: one side radiates with the crisp, colorless brilliance of EF/VS white diamonds, while the other glows with the rare, sun-kissed warmth of yellow stones. This artisanal contrast is set against rich 14K Yellow Gold, which serves to amplify the vibrancy of the canary diamonds and the icy clarity of the white stones.
Crafted with 100% ethically sourced lab-grown diamonds, this ring provides the same physical and optical properties as mined stones with a significantly smaller environmental footprint. Despite its substantial 3.0g gold weight and impressive finger coverage, the band is meticulously engineered for sculptural comfort, ensuring it sits gracefully for all-day wear.
Product Specifications
- Style: Amorati Statement Ring
- Setting: Sculptural Asymmetrical Bloom
- Metal: 14K Yellow Gold
- Band Width: 3.0mm
- Total Carat Weight: 2.4 ctw
- Diamond Clarity: VS
- Diamond Color: EF
- Stone Shape: Pear
- Stone Type: Lab Grown Diamond
How to Style & Wear
Let this architectural piece take center stage by wearing it solo on your index or middle finger paired with a sleek silk slip dress or a sharp power suit.
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You don’t have to know every variable.
The 4Cs define a range. Most brands choose somewhere in the middle. Here’s exactly where Amorati draws the line, and why it matters.
GIA Clarity Scale
VS1 Minimum - FL/IF
VS1 clarity means inclusions are invisible to the naked eye. Even under close scrutiny. Our minimum is where many retailers "curated" or "select" category ends. We start here.
GIA Color Scale
D to F Colorless Tier Only
D to F is the "colorless" tier, which are the brightest and whitest diamonds under the GIA standards. Most competitors allow G–H. We don't ever go below F.