Sometimes the Ring Doesn't Change. You Do.
Why an anniversary redesign isn't about a bigger stone, it's about a ring finally catching up to who you've become. The story behind a 10-carat NYC commission.
The Art of the Anniversary Redesign
There's a misconception that redesigning an engagement ring means rejecting the past. I don't see it that way. I think the opposite is often true.
The clients who come to me for a redesign usually aren't trying to erase a chapter of their lives. They're trying to understand how that chapter fits into the person they've become.
An engagement ring captures a moment in time, but the people who wear them don't stay frozen there. Careers evolve, families grow, priorities shift, and identity changes right along with them. If we allow ourselves to grow as people, why should we expect the objects we wear every day to tell only the story of who we used to be? A redesign isn't about abandoning history. It's about letting history keep speaking.
Jewelry Should Age With You
One question I ask most often during a redesign consultation is surprisingly simple: who were you when you first wore this ring?
Almost every client pauses. Then the stories begin. Some tell me they were twenty-three, just starting out and doing the best they could with what they had. Others describe a season shaped by uncertainty, where the original ring reflected financial limitations more than personal taste. I upgraded a ring last year for a client who got engaged to her husband back in college. They're both nurse practitioners now, and the redesign wasn't about the original ring being insufficient. It was about the two people who chose it becoming entirely different, more established versions of themselves, together. You can see the finished Clemence ring in full.
Others come to celebrate milestone anniversaries, not because the first ring wasn't enough, but because the marriage had become something richer than either of them could have imagined on their wedding day.
The catalyst is always different. The deeper reason rarely is: people want the objects closest to them to feel honest.
The Difference Between Redesign and Reinvention
There are times I tell clients not to redesign a piece, which usually surprises them. If the only reason for changing a ring is that social media convinced them it's outdated, that's not enough on its own. Trends have expiration dates. Meaning doesn't.
A redesign should never strip the soul out of the original piece just to make it look current. That doesn't mean an antique setting has to stay untouched. It means understanding what made the original meaningful before deciding what deserves to survive. Sometimes it's the center stone. Sometimes it's a hand engraving hidden inside the band, or simply the memory attached to the piece. My job isn't to preserve everything about a ring. It's to preserve what actually matters.
I Always Ask "Why?"
When someone places an heirloom on my desk, I rarely start by discussing metal or gemstones. Instead I ask what they love about the piece, what they remember when they look at it, and what they're actually afraid of losing. Those answers become the blueprint.
Clients often arrive convinced they need to preserve every physical detail. By the end of the conversation, they usually realize what they wanted to preserve all along was the feeling, not the setting. Once we identify the emotional center of a piece, the design becomes remarkably clear. This is exactly why every redesign begins with a real conversation as part of our process, not a straight-to-sketch approach.
A Consultation I'll Never Forget
One client came to me having outgrown a ring that no longer reflected the decade she and her husband had built together. She wanted her tenth anniversary marked in the piece itself: ten total carats, one for each year of marriage. We built the design around a 7.5-carat pear-shaped center stone, added roughly 2.5 carats across the band and matching ring jacket. The set could be worn together or separately depending on the day.
Before a finished piece exists, every commission begins as an idea. This early sketch explored the proportions, structure, and design language behind Karla’s 7-carat pear upgrade ring.
You can see the finished Karla ring set in full.
She described the process as consistent and attentive from the very first conversation: I asked about her vision before anything else, then revised renderings until each one matched exactly what she'd imagined. That ring set has since become one of the most requested looks on my site, not just for the carat count, but for what it actually represents: a decade, quantified in stone, worn every day since.
History Doesn't Have to Look Old
One of my favorite parts of a redesign is discovering how timeless certain ideas really are. Victorian engraving, Art Deco geometry, Edwardian elegance, organic botanical motifs: these aren't relics, they're design languages, and a language doesn't become obsolete just because time passes. It simply finds new ways to be spoken.
An heirloom can feel modern without losing its history. Sometimes that means changing yellow gold to platinum, or introducing rose gold to soften an otherwise formal design. Sometimes it means transforming a ring into a pendant worn close to the heart, or creating wedding bands from inherited gold so multiple family members can carry a shared legacy forward. The goal was never preservation for its own sake. It's continued life. Jewelry wasn't meant to spend decades inside a velvet box. It was meant to witness life.
The Ring Becomes Honest Again
One of the most rewarding parts of my work is watching someone put on a redesigned piece for the first time. There's usually a brief silence, then a smile, not because the ring is newer or larger, but because it finally feels like theirs.
The past hasn't disappeared. It's simply found a new voice. That's what a thoughtful redesign should accomplish: not replacement, not reinvention, but recognition. Recognition that the person you were deserves to be honored, and the person you've become deserves to be seen. The most meaningful pieces aren't the ones that stay physically unchanged. They're the ones that keep telling the truth, generation after generation.
Sometimes the ring doesn't change. You do. And sometimes the most respectful thing you can do is let your jewelry grow alongside you.
If you're sitting on a piece you love but no longer wear, that conversation is worth having.