Lab-grown diamonds cut with uncommon precision. Portuguese. Ashoka. Dutch Marquise. Each stone a work of geometric art — not a commodity.
160+ facets. A starburst brilliance pattern unmatched by any round. Exceptional fire in low light — a stone that holds a room.
Where the oval ends and the marquise begins. Softly pointed, architecturally precise. No bow-tie shadow when cut correctly.
62 facets, criss-cut weave, softer than a cushion. Luminescent rather than brilliant — a stone that glows at dinner, not just in sunlight.
Step-cut facets inside a marquise outline. The antique choice for a stone that reads as sculptural rather than sparkly — calm, confident, collectible.
The original brilliant. 58 facets cut for candlelight. A high crown, open culet, and irregular outline that no machine can replicate.
Six sides. Step-cut facets. Pure geometry. A hall-of-mirrors stillness that rewards contemplation over glance.
Portuguese Cut Solitaire Ring
"A stone cut with uncommon precision, set with quiet confidence — not a commodity, but a choice."
Every stone in our collection is available to view at our Panchwati boutique. We'll walk you through the cuts, the certificates, and the settings — no pressure, no jargon, no obligation.
The round brilliant was optimised for maximum light return. Rare cuts were optimised for character — and character reads as yours alone.
ReadBoth are round. Both are brilliant. But the Portuguese has 92 facets and a starburst that no round brilliant can replicate — at any price.
ReadIt's a real cut with a real history. Here's what separates an authentic Dutch Marquise from a standard marquise with a step-cut story attached.
ReadFor two millennia, India was the only known source of diamonds in the world. The Old Mine cut carries that origin in its geometry.
ReadMarquise-style cuts carry more buying risks than rounds or cushions, and those risks are less commonly explained at the point of sale.
ReadSix cuts. What each one is, what defines it optically, and one thing to check before you buy.
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