20/07/2025
Which came first? The diamond or the ring?
Any human living prior to 1947—and going back to the cavemen—would’ve thought that question absurd.
Bexause diamonds are just a 150-year footnote in a 10,000-year-old story.
We’ve been marking love and loyalty with circles since before there were empires, currencies, or even writing itself.
Ancient Egyptians braided reeds into rings.
Romans forged iron bands, stamped like contracts, signifying ownership.
Jewish law requires a plain, unbroken circle with no stones.
Victorians exchanged rings made from hair (hopefully washed first).
Rings have been made from bone, bronze, copper, wood, iron, hair, gold—whatever we could shape into a circle.
The materials shifted. The message didn’t.
The ring was always the ritual.
Then came the 20th century.
And with it, the great diamond invention.
Diamonds? That wasn’t tradition.
That was fossilized carbon brilliantly rebranded as eternity.
“A Diamond is Forever”?
Only if forever starts in 1947!
So it’s almost laughable to hear De Beers now call lab-grown diamonds “one of the biggest confidence tricks played on consumers.”
De Beers created the myth, actually built the lab-grown tech, lost control—and now calls the result a con?
That’s the natural pot calling the lab-grown kettle black.
As rich in irony as DeBeers once was with the diamonds they swore were rare.
But let’s be honest: if diamonds (natural or lab) were sacred, we wouldn’t upgrade them.
We wouldn’t comparison-shop with PDFs and spreadsheets.
We wouldn’t trade them in when taste or timing changes.
But we do.
And we always have.
But the ring persists.
What we resize.
What we hand down.
What we find in drawers long after someone is gone.
What we twist and turn when we feel closest—or farthest—from the one we love.
And if lab-grown makes all diamonds irrelevant?
The ring will still matter.
Maybe it will hold another type of stone, morganite, sapphire, moon rock—or not stone at all.
Maybe it will be a diamond grown from a love letter, carbon-captured, or AI-sculpted.
If the industry wants natural diamonds to mean something tomorrow, it needs to start branding them today, the product not the paperwork.
But whatever happens to diamonds, the symbol will endure.
The Ring Is Forever.
Note: I know the image is a mess. The timeline’s off, the caveman ring looks like a bagel, and the future’s still buffering. That’s DALL·E—great at vibes, terrible at details. I’m not fixing it. I’m lazy, and this is just to make a point:
If the diamond era ends because the industry is too foolish to adapt, engagement rings will carry on. Just sadly, without diamonds.
/ccto