South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Queer couples drawn to subversive engagement stones

Choosing ring ‘about honoring your identity, from your presentati­on to your pronouns’

- By Abigail Covington

Salt-and-pepper diamonds used to be a hard sell, according to jewelry designer Lori Linkous Devine.

“They were the reject diamonds back in the day,” said Devine, founder of Lolide, who uses the gender-neutral courtesy title Mx. The stones’ gray color and mottled clarity were seen as flaws.

Devine, who lives in Seattle, has been making jewelry “for every gender and gender identity,” as she put it, since 2010. In 2016, she began to advertise her products specifical­ly to LGBTQ customers. “It was after Trump was elected and I had a whole breakdown,” Devine said. “I started looking at what I can do with this business that will feel good.”

She soon noticed a trend among those clients, who she says now account for at least one-fourth of her business. When shopping for engagement rings, many want “the opposite of what a diamond is supposed to stand for,” she said, and are “seeking out the flawed.” As a result, Devine and other experts say once-overlooked stones such as saltand-pepper diamonds, as well as other nontraditi­onal varieties, have become more coveted.

Beyond the traditiona­l

When Tim Bell, a human resources manager at Prudential Financial, and Joshua Farrar, a senior associate of client operations at Daybreak Health, became engaged in March, Bell, 30, proposed using an inexpensiv­e ring knowing that Farrar, 29, wanted to pick out a proper engagement ring on his own.

For his actual ring, Farrar desired something unconventi­onal. As a gay man, “I’ve been defying what I’ve been expected to do my whole life,” he said, adding, “The symbol of love that’s on my left hand, it needs to be a reflection of that.” Another requiremen­t was that the ring have a stone.

Farrar, who lives with Bell in New York, said “the normal, clear, standard engagement diamond” did not interest him. He was instead drawn to cognac diamonds, which can have a range of gold, brown and amber hues that Farrar said “achieved the masculine and feminine quality” he sought in a center stone.

When Farrar met with some jewelers in New York’s diamond district, they questioned his preference for cognac diamonds, telling him that their saturated color makes them inferior in clarity, a traditiona­l marker of diamond quality. “You don’t want that,” Farrar said of their advice. “But I do want that,” he told the jewelers in reply.

Farrar took his search to Automic Gold, a jewelry brand in New York that he had first encountere­d on Instagram. In emails with the line’s designer, AL Sandimirov­a, who is known for making inclusive jewelry, Farrar discussed his vision for his engagement ring.

Sandimirov­a presented Farrar with a selection of cognac diamonds, as well as a salt-and-pepper diamond. Farrar said the latter stone “just spoke to him,” and he ultimately went with a saltand-pepper diamond ring.

A salt-and-pepper diamond was also the stone chosen by Roxy Valle, a 31-year-old drag king performer who has worked in television production, when designing an engagement ring for Taylor Orci, 39, a television screenwrit­er and story editor. The couple, who live in Los Angeles, were married in July. Valle, who is transgende­r and nonbinary, cited the stone’s unconventi­onality as one reason she chose to use it in the ring for Orci, who is nonbinary. Valle also liked how, compared with a clear diamond, the saltand-pepper variety has a subtler sparkle.

“It has a great granitelik­e reflection on it, which is bright, but also rugged and rough,” said Valle, who paid $2,250 for the ring from Kris Averi, a jewelry line in New York.

Haley Biemiller, co-founder of the jewelry line Venvs, which specialize­s in “atypical” stones including salt-and-pepper diamonds, said another style favored by the brand’s queer clients was moissanite. Grown in labs, moissanite looks more like a clear diamond and is almost as durable, she explained, but “sparkles a little bit more like a rainbow.” A half-carat moissanite sells for around

$400 at Venvs, while a 2.25carat stone can cost $1,500, according to the line’s other co-founder, Sam Indelicato.

Gender-neutral choices

Although salt-andpepper diamonds and moissanite have become popular, jewelers including Kris Harvey, the designer of Kris Averi, say most of their LGBTQ customers seeking engagement rings with stones prefer varieties that neither are related to diamonds nor bear resemblanc­e to them. Those clients tend to choose sapphires — often Montana sapphires. While sapphires are known for their blue color, Montana sapphires can be yellow, pink, gray or teal. Like traditiona­l sapphires, the Montana variety can be bicolor, meaning an individual stone has two hues, and some can change colors depending on the light, said Emily Chelsea, who designs a namesake line of jewelry in Philadelph­ia.

“The Montana sapphires that I’m drawn to usually show three colors,” Chelsea said.

LGBTQ clients account for 65% of Chelsea’s customers and are generally not interested in following heteronorm­ative traditions. “We aren’t seeing that,” Chelsea said. “We tell people all the time, do whatever the hell you want.”

Harvey said defining gender-neutral jewelry could even be hard for some of her clients who asked for it. Which is why choosing an engagement ring, she added, is “about honoring your identity, from your presentati­on to your pronouns,” no matter the stone, cut or band.

At the Emily Chelsea jewelry store in Philadelph­ia and on the brand’s website, “We don’t call any of our rings ‘engagement rings’ or ‘wedding bands’ or ‘men’s and women’s bands,’ ” Chelsea said. Instead, her company uses the terms “wide bands,” “thin bands” and “rings with a center stone,” all of which recall more inclusive language some couples are using to define themselves and their unions.

As she put it, “anyone can wear any ring.”

 ?? TARA BENNETT ?? Tim Bell, left, and Joshua Farrar, who picked out his own engagement ring, one with a salt-and-pepper diamond that “just spoke to him,” got engaged in March.
TARA BENNETT Tim Bell, left, and Joshua Farrar, who picked out his own engagement ring, one with a salt-and-pepper diamond that “just spoke to him,” got engaged in March.

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