Hidden diamonds make for intimate engagement rings
Jenny Sweetnam’s Inverse collection saves the diamond for the wearer’s eyes only

Alternative engagement rings are reduced down to essential silhouettes by Jenny Sweetnam, who has gone back to basics with her new collection, Inverse. The 2018 Wallpaper* Design Award winner has established herself as a contemporary jewellery designer who brings a freshness to traditional pieces, through a simple and innovative approach. The new collection builds on these foundations with sculptural designs in 18ct yellow gold that make discreet, intimate engagement tokens or even men's engagement rings.
Lab-grown diamonds, rather than being on display, are encased in curving forms, uncovered for the eyes of the wearer only. In other pieces, diamonds are tucked into the smooth whorls of eternity rings, or capped with understated lids.
‘The stone is not the focus, it is not seen at all in the piece unless the wearer chooses to invert and position of the ring to reveal the stones,’ Sweetnam says. ‘I love the idea that it is the feeling of wearing such a valuable element that is important to the wearer rather than the show of it. I feel that the idea of wearing a diamond that is privately encased for yourself to know about is thrilling and empowering. It also creates the opportunity for someone who does not connect with a traditional engagement-ring aesthetic to wear the precious elements of an engagement or eternity ring just in a new modern way.’
In all her jewellery, Sweetnam focuses on crafting a graphic, bold silhouette. In her first collection to include diamonds, she builds on this without compromising these essential forms for pieces which make for chic and affordable engagement rings. Her pieces hold secrets; in the fine narrow diamond-encrusted ring hidden within an oversized ring there is an added sentiment to typical engagement jewellery design. ‘In other pieces, a larger diamond would sit at the end of a ring silhouette, such as in Silent Diamond Ring, punctuating a graphic shape rather than feeling like it was an add-on,’ she adds. ‘Conceptually, I knew the diamonds needed to be tucked away within the jewellery.’
INFORMATION
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Hannah Silver is the Art, Culture, Watches & Jewellery Editor of Wallpaper*. Since joining in 2019, she has overseen offbeat design trends and in-depth profiles, and written extensively across the worlds of culture and luxury. She enjoys meeting artists and designers, viewing exhibitions and conducting interviews on her frequent travels.
-
The most stylish hotel takeovers to pop up at this summer
From Capri to Ibiza, luxury fashion brands are taking over seaside resorts with exclusive boutique pop-ups and bespoke poolside accessories
-
Guests dined on Bangladeshi-inspired cuisine at the Serpentine Summer Party 2025
The party marked the 25th anniversary of the Serpentine Architecture Pavilion – and celebrated this year’s design by Bangladeshi architect Marina Tabassum and her Dhaka-based firm
-
Vincent Van Gogh and Anselm Kiefer are in rich and intimate dialogue at the Royal Academy of Arts
German artist Anselm Kiefer has paid tribute to Van Gogh throughout his career. When their work is viewed together, a rich relationship is revealed
-
Rachel Boston’s one-off engagement rings play with offbeat design codes
Rachel Boston is celebrating the tenth anniversary of her brand with ten unique engagement rings
-
Sophie Bille Brahe’s wedding bands trace the undulating curves of her engagement rings
Sophie Bille Brahe’s new collection of wedding bands echoes the fluid silhouettes of her most popular engagement rings
-
Antique diamonds sink into textured gold in Ruth Tomlinson’s engagement rings
Tradition and modernity unite in Ruth Tomlinson's new ‘Paragons’ engagement ring collection
-
Jessica McCormack unveils engagement rings and new London bridal space
Jessica McCormack’s new engagement ring collection ties in with the opening of a new bridal floor in her London townhouse store
-
Brooches for grooms bring elegance to a wedding day suit
Brooches from Mikimoto, Boucheron and vintage Raymond Yard and Cartier make chic accessories for grooms. Pin your hopes on these
-
Mix and match Brilliant Earth’s engagement rings and wedding bands
The new Ensemble collection from Brilliant Earth invites you to choose your own combination of engagement rings and nesting and classic wedding bands
-
Introducing Annoushka’s stackable engagement rings
Annoushka’s new engagement rings can be worn in endless ways: mixed, matched and stacked
-
Engagement rings for the modern minimalist
Engagement rings become understated and elegant adornments in the hands of Spanish brand Sansoeurs