Did You Know?
With so many different diamond shapes to choose from at Solomon Brothers Jewelers, you can select a diamond that truly reflects the personality and style of your future bride.
Browse through our selection of diamond shapes below to learn more about each.
Brilliant Round
The most traditional shape for an engagement ring diamond with 58 facets for spectacular fire and brilliance.
Oval
Oval cut diamonds are considered an attractive and romantic style. They are basically an elliptical version of the round brilliant diamond.
Emerald
This diamond cut features exquisite, understated elegance with fewer facets, but classic appeal.
Cushion
Another attractive antique style, it brings back the romance of a bygone era. Cushion cut diamonds often appear softer due to their rounded corners.
Asscher
These diamonds are octagonal or square with beveled corners. This magnificent antique cut is enjoying a well-deserved resurgence in popularity.
Princess
This diamond cut admired for its contemporary lines, sharp corners and many sparkling facets.
Marquise
Known for its captivating grandeur and royal heritage, this diamond often looks larger than it actually is. It is often described as an oval cut diamond with pointed ends.
Pear
This sparkling tear-drop shape evokes the qualities of an oval and a marquise. Sometimes a pear-shaped diamond might be referred to as a teardrop.
Radiant
A unique cut capturing the elegance of an emerald cut with the brilliance of a round. These diamonds have a crisscross facet pattern.
Heart
The Valentine of diamond cuts and the perfect choice for pure romantics.
Trilliant
A stunning triangle of fire with pointed or rounded corners.
Baguette
A rectangular or oblong shape celebrated for its quiet beauty
Tapered Baguette
A relatively long and thin baguette with one pair of tapered sides.
Trapezoid
A four-sided diamond in which two of the sides are parallel and two slants towards each other; trapezoids are normally places on either side of a central diamond.
Half Moon
Straight on one side and curved on the other, these side stones are usually set with their straight side adjacent to a center stone.