One
Choosing an engagement ring — where to start
The best engagement ring is the one that looks like it was always meant for the person wearing it. Start with them, not a checklist. Notice the jewellery they already reach for, the colour of the metal they wear most, whether they prefer delicate things or bold ones. From there, four decisions shape the ring. The style of setting. The diamond. The metal. And the budget that feels right. None of this needs to be worked out alone. Walking people through exactly these choices is what we do every day, and there is no wrong question to ask.
Two
Engagement ring styles
The setting is the ring's personality. A few designs account for most of what people choose. A solitaire is one diamond on a clean band. It is the most classical engagement ring there is, and the one that lets the stone speak for itself. A halo wraps the centre diamond in a circle of smaller diamonds, adding fire and making the centre stone read about half a carat larger than it is. A hidden halo does the same trick beneath the stone, visible only from the side. A three-stone ring sets a smaller diamond on either side of the centre, often used to symbolise the journey of a relationship. A side-stone design carries diamonds along the band itself, for a continuous line of light. Beyond these styles, a bezel setting wraps the diamond in a smooth rim of metal for a modern, secure look. A gemstone ring swaps the centre diamond for a coloured stone. Prefer a ring of his own? See our men's engagement rings.
Three
Choosing your diamond — the 4Cs
A diamond's beauty and value come down to four characteristics, the "4Cs". Cut is the most important, and the one most people underestimate. It describes how well a diamond has been shaped to return light, and a well-cut diamond is brighter and more alive than a poorly cut one of the same weight. Colour grades how close to colourless a white diamond is, from D (perfectly colourless) downward. Clarity measures the tiny natural marks inside the stone, many of which are invisible without magnification. Carat is the diamond's weight, which is not the same as its visible size. The size you see on the hand also depends on cut and shape.
You don't need the top grade in every category. A diamond chosen with a little expert guidance, with strong cut and a colour and clarity that look flawless to the eye, often looks just as beautiful as a far more expensive one. Our guide to diamond carat weight explains size and weight in more detail.
It is also worth knowing where the certificate comes from. Every Monroe Yorke diamond carries an independent grading certificate from one of the world's leading laboratories. GIA, the Gemological Institute of America, is the most widely recognised. IGI, the International Gemological Institute, is the leader in lab-grown diamond grading. HRD, the Antwerp authority, is where many of the world's master gemmologists train. Whichever lab grades the stone, the certificate number is laser-inscribed on the diamond itself, by the lab. So the stone you receive is provably the stone described in the paperwork. We're happy to show you the inscription under magnification any time.
Four
Diamond shapes
The shape of the diamond sets the whole tone of the ring. The round brilliant is the most popular cut and the fieriest. Oval and pear shapes look elegant on the hand and elongate the finger. The cushion is softer and more romantic. The emerald cut is clean and architectural, with an understated character of its own. The princess cut is crisp and modern. Marquise and radiant cuts offer something a little less expected. It is always worth trying a few shapes on the hand, either in person or on a video call. They wear very differently.
Five
Natural or lab-grown diamonds
Monroe Yorke offers both, and we will never push you toward one. A natural diamond formed deep in the earth over billions of years. It carries genuine rarity and a sense of the extraordinary, and it holds its place as the traditional choice. A lab-grown diamond is created in a matter of months in a controlled environment that does what the earth does, just faster. It is chemically and optically identical to a natural diamond, with the same crystalline structure and hardness ranking of 10. The fire is indistinguishable.
A lab-grown diamond typically costs 40 to 60 percent less for the same size and quality, which lets the same budget reach a larger or higher-grade stone. Our natural diamonds carry GIA grading, our lab-grown diamonds carry IGI grading, and either way the certificate number is laser-inscribed on the stone itself. So whichever you choose, the quality is independently verified and the paperwork is permanently linked to the diamond. The decision between natural and lab-grown is personal. It is worth talking through with a specialist who has no preference about which one you pick.
Six
Metals
Engagement rings in this collection are made in 18ct gold, in three colours. White gold is the most popular. It is bright and contemporary, and it makes a white diamond look whiter still. Yellow gold is warm and timeless, and has had a strong revival in recent years. Rose gold is softer and a little more distinctive. The metal also affects how a ring feels through everyday wear, and how it sits against the skin, so it is worth seeing each colour against the hand before deciding. Platinum is available for couples who would like it, and there are a few good reasons to choose it. Ask our specialists if you'd like to think it through together.
Seven
What an engagement ring costs in Australia, honestly
You may have heard you should spend two or three months' salary on an engagement ring. It's worth knowing where that idea came from. It was a diamond-industry advertising line from last century, not a rule for life. The right amount to spend is what feels comfortable for you.
What actually drives the price is the diamond itself, not the metal or the setting. Carat weight is the largest factor. Whether the stone is natural or lab-grown is the next. Cut quality, colour and clarity each affect the price as well. In Australia, engagement ring prices generally run from around $3,000 to $15,000, with many couples spending between $5,000 and $8,000. There is no "should" in that range. Monroe Yorke engagement rings start from $1,579. Choosing a lab-grown diamond stretches a budget considerably further, and every ring can be adjusted to suit yours. Tell us your budget honestly, and we will show you the most beautiful ring it can buy. Never the other way around.
Eight
Made to order, or designed from scratch
Every ring in this collection can be made to order. Your choice of diamond, metal and finger size, crafted for you rather than taken from a case. If you have something specific in mind, our jewellers design bespoke engagement rings from the beginning. An idea or a sketch, a 3D rendering you approve before any metal is cut, and then the ring itself, finished by hand. The same care goes into a bespoke commission as a piece from the collection. A bespoke ring typically takes around four to six weeks to complete once the design is locked. Begin with a discovery call and our designers will take it from there.
Nine
Why Monroe Yorke
Monroe Yorke Diamonds has been an Australian fine jeweller for 20 years, since 2006. Our studios in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth are appointment-only by design, so your time with us is unhurried and advisory, never spent on a sales floor. Our jewellery is designed, made and finished in our own Sydney workshop, by the same team you speak to. Sean himself, our founder, trained at both the GIA in the United States and the HRD in Antwerp, the two most respected diamond institutes in the world. Every diamond we sell carries independent grading from GIA, IGI or HRD, and every certificate number is laser-inscribed on the stone itself. Every ring is backed by a lifetime warranty on the craft, free insured shipping anywhere in Australia, and a 14-day return policy. We see choosing an engagement ring as something to be enjoyed, not rushed. We'd be glad to help you do exactly that.