Showing posts with label Vine Ring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vine Ring. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2026

New Forest Matching Wedding Band Story Blog

 

When It becomes Something More...



Sometimes a custom design reaches a point where everything suddenly makes sense.

This men’s wedding band began as a challenge: create a ring that matched a previously commissioned engagement ring featuring a Blue Sapphire in 14k Rose Gold with a medium oxidation finish — but without simply copying the original design.

The engagement ring carried a very organic, woodland flow with curved branch structures wrapping and lifting the sapphire almost like it was being offered upward. The side profile had movement, growth, and softness to it. Beautiful for her ring.

But his ring needed a different presence.

Instead of designing the men’s band completely from scratch, I decided to work almost genetically.


New Forest emerald engagement ring set in flowing organic branches
with matching nested wedding band in warm rose gold.

Because I made the molds from both of my original rings, I began borrowing structural elements directly from her ring and wedding band. I used the side architecture from her engagement ring as the foundation for his band, then combined and blended two wedding bands together to create a broader, stronger flow.


Organic rose gold men’s wedding band with layered twig and bark textures flowing in an asymmetrical vine-inspired design.
New Forest men’s wedding band in rose gold featuring intertwined
flowing branch textures inspired by natural woodland forms.




The result became less about creating “matching rings” and more about creating two rings that clearly belong to the same story.

One of the most important parts of the process was preserving the organic language of the original design while shifting the overall movement into a more masculine direction. Instead of delicate upward movement, the branches became more grounded and structured. The lines were straightened slightly, spacing adjusted, and the overall posture of the ring changed without losing the feeling of natural growth.

Since his ring would not contain a stone, additional twig structures were added to blend the transitions together and create continuity across the surface of the band itself.

The medium oxidation in the 14k Rose Gold will help unify everything in the final cast by darkening the recesses and emphasizing the bark-like texture and depth between the branches.

These are the moments I love most as a designer.

The quiet early-morning hours where the pieces stop feeling separate and suddenly become one complete idea.

Not duplicated. Not copied. But connected.

That is always the goal.

To create jewelry that feels like it grew naturally into existence.

— New Forest