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Reina White Gold Ring - Moonstone & Diamonds

14K White Gold · Moonstone, Diamond


Regular Price 416£ Sale Price 499£ −16%

    Material
      Stone
        Size 8· EU 56¾ · 18.2 mm

        Low stock

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        Certified Authenticity

        Worried about authenticity? Indira jewelry is inspected and hallmarked by ANPC according to law

        2-Year Warranty

        Concerned about quality? Indira jewelry comes with a 2-year warranty for manufacturing defects.

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        14K White Gold

        Our 14K gold jewelry is crafted to last a lifetime. Gold jewelry does not oxidize and does not change color, even when worn daily, year after year.

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        Piece Story

        Reina White Gold Ring - Moonstone & Diamonds

        essentials-collection, delicate-collection

        White Gold Ring Reina - Moonstone & Diamonds - is a specially crafted ring with which you can mark an important moment in your life.

        The Moonstone measures 9 mm in height and 7 mm in width, and the ring band is encrusted with genuine SI GH Diamonds. The diamonds total 0.11 ct.

         

         


        — Indira

        Mark your moments

        Reina White Gold Ring - Moonstone & Diamonds - Indira

        Fit & Feel

        Fit & Feel

        Product Details

        Weight

        Style

        Classic

        Dimensions

        9 mm

        Stone Cut

        Faceted

        Stone Dimensions

        7 mm x 9 mm

        What's in the Piece

        Materials & Stones.

        Material

        14K White Gold

        Our 14K gold jewelry is crafted to last a lifetime. Gold jewelry does not oxidize and does not change color, even when worn daily, year after year.

        Care

        Moonstone is a mineral from the feldspar family, a variety of orthoclase also known as adularia. With a hardness of 6–6,5 on the Mohs scale, it’s a delicate stone yet full of character, prized not for a blinding sparkle, but for its vivid inner glow.

        It forms in igneous rocks that cool very slowly. During this process, the mineral separates into alternating, microscopic layers of orthoclase and albite — and those very layers are the secret behind its beauty.

        When light enters the stone, it scatters between these fine layers and creates an optical effect called adularescence: that bluish-silver sheen that seems to drift beneath the surface and move with the stone, like a moonbeam caught inside.

        It’s precisely this play of light that gave it its name. The Romans were convinced that Moonstone is, quite literally, frozen moonlight, solidified as it fell — a belief that has endured for centuries.

        In India, it has been considered for thousands of years a sacred, luck-bringing stone and a traditional gift for lovers, said to reveal the future to those who gaze at it on nights with a full moon.

        It enjoyed a major moment of glory during the Art Nouveau period, at the turn of the 19th–20th centuries, when jewelers such as René Lalique and Louis Comfort Tiffany turned it into collectible pieces, valuing its dreamy color more than its material worth.

        It surged back into the spotlight in the '60s–'70s with hippie fashion and a bohemian spirit, and it remains today one of the favorite stones for jewelry with a delicate, mystical feel.

        Its base color ranges from milky white to delicate shades of gray, cream, or peach. There are also special varieties: the «rainbow» moonstone, with multicolored flashes, or the blue one, the most prized, in which the luster seems to ignite from within.

        The finest specimens, with intense blue adularescence, come from Sri Lanka; other important sources are India and Myanmar. Every stone is unique, and the iridescence looks its best in direct light.

        In crystal healing traditions, Moonstone symbolizes femininity, intuition, and new beginnings. It’s said to bring emotional balance, calm the mind, and spark creativity — which is why it’s often chosen as jewelry with personal meaning. It is also one of June’s birthstones.

        Being a relatively soft stone with a cleavage that makes it sensitive to impact, it needs a bit of care. Protect it from shocks and scratches, and take off your jewelry before showering, swimming, or cleaning.

        Avoid contact with perfumes and chemicals, and for cleaning use a soft microfiber cloth — no ultrasonic cleaners or harsh solutions.

        Thanks to its discreet, luminous beauty, Moonstone shines brightest alongside 925 silver or white gold. It’s a perfect match for delicate rings, earrings, and pendants worn every day — a choice for anyone who loves jewelry with personality and a story behind it.

        Hardness · (Mohs Scale) 6. Can scratch ordinary glass - Can be scratched by harder minerals / 10
        Care
        Stone

        Diamond

        Diamond is the hardest known natural material—the only gemstone that hits the top score, 10, on the hardness scale. It is made of pure, crystallized carbon.

        A diamond you wear today likely formed over a billion years ago, about 150 km deep in Earth's mantle, under unimaginable pressures.

        The rarest diamonds, blue ones, rose from depths of hundreds of kilometers and owe their color to traces of boron.

        It was brought to the surface by ancient volcanic eruptions, through rocks called kimberlite—nature's true "elevators" from the deep.

        The diamond’s unmistakable brilliance comes from the way it refracts and disperses light—an effect called "fire." Its quality is graded by the 4Cs: cut, color, clarity, and carat.

        The notion that a diamond is a must for engagements isn’t nearly as old as it seems: it was born from a 1947 ad slogan, "A Diamond Is Forever," written by copywriter Frances Gerety for De Beers and later named the greatest slogan of the 20th century.

        Some famous diamonds, like the blue Hope Diamond, carry the notoriety of a "curse"—a captivating tale, but just a tale, fueled by their tumultuous histories.

        The Koh-i-Noor diamond passed through the hands of Mughal, Persian, and Afghan emperors before it reached the British Crown, where it remains today.

        The most prized is the colorless diamond, but there are also fancy-colored diamonds—from yellow to pink and blue—some rarer and more valuable than colorless stones.

        A symbol of eternal love, purity, and strength, the diamond remains the classic choice for engagement rings and is the birthstone for April.

        Practically indestructible in everyday wear—but it does have cleavage directions, so a sharp blow to an edge can chip it; it’s worth protecting from heavy impacts.

        It cleans easily with a microfiber cloth. Its brilliance pairs beautifully with 925 silver, white gold, or yellow gold.

        Hardness · (Mohs Scale) 10. The hardest natural mineral; can only be scratched by diamond / 10
        Care

        Customer Reviews