Bridal Sets

Two Rings, One Answer

Bridal sets by Molleln. Engagement ring and wedding band designed together — Classic, Vintage, Nature Inspired, and Unique styles across 18 gemstones and 5 stone shapes.

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Vintage Pear Cut Lab Diamond Bridal Ring Set
Vintage Pear Cut Lab Diamond Bridal Ring Set

Vintage Pear Cut Lab Diamond Bridal Ring Set

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Nature-Inspired Oval-Cut Sapphire Bridal Ring Set
Nature-Inspired Oval-Cut Sapphire Bridal Ring Set

Nature-Inspired Oval-Cut Sapphire Bridal Ring Set

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$562.08

Luxury Pear Cut Milgrain Halo Lab Diamond Bridal Ring Set - Yellow-Gold
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Bridal Sets | Two Rings, One Answer

Most people choose an engagement ring first.

Then, somewhere between the proposal and the wedding, they realize the wedding band has to fit alongside it — and spend weeks trying to find something that works. Sometimes they find it. Sometimes they settle.

Molleln bridal sets start from a different place.

The engagement ring and the wedding band are designed as a single system from the beginning. The proportions are solved together. The metal is consistent. The stone shape determines the visual logic of the entire set — not just the center stone, but the way the two rings sit side by side and read as one complete thing.

You do not have to figure out the second ring. It was already part of the answer.

Why a Molleln Bridal Set

Two rings that were designed separately will always look like two rings that were designed separately.

The spacing is slightly off. The band profiles do not quite agree. The pavé on one does not respond to the prong height of the other. These are small things individually. Together, on the hand, they accumulate.

Molleln bridal sets are built to eliminate that. Every set starts with the assumption that both rings will be worn together — and every design decision follows from that. Band width, setting height, stone profile, metal finish. Solved once, for both rings, at the same time.

That is what a bridal set is supposed to be.

 

Shop By Style

Classic

The cleanest version of a complete bridal set. Classic style applies the same proportion logic to both rings — no decorative excess, no references that will age, a set that reads correctly now and in twenty years.

Nature Inspired

Both rings carry the geometry of natural forms — leaf structures, vine-like band details, organic curves that soften without weakening the overall silhouette. The engagement ring and wedding band share the same visual language: grown, not manufactured.

Unique

For people who looked at the standard options and needed both rings to say something that the standard options do not. Unique sets break from conventional setting logic without losing the design coherence that makes a bridal set work.

Vintage

Structure and detail work from another era, applied to a complete two-ring system. Vintage bridal sets carry the proportion discipline of rings made before shortcuts were available — both pieces built with the same historical reference so neither one reads out of place.

Shop By Stone

The stone you choose does not just determine the center of the engagement ring. In a bridal set, it determines the visual weight, the color logic, and the design language of the entire system.

A deep-colored stone like ruby or sapphire anchors the set differently than a near-colorless moissanite. A translucent stone like moonstone or moss agate creates a different kind of softness than a stone with high fire. The wedding band is designed to support whichever stone is at the center — which means the stone choice shapes both rings, not just one.

Molleln bridal sets are available across 18 stones:

l Moissanite — Maximum fire, deliberate over the default

- Lab Grown Diamond — The tradition, without the extraction

- Garnet — Deep red with quiet authority

- Amethyst — Cool violet, one of the most wearable colored stones in a set

- Aquamarine — Pale blue-green, transparent and unhurried

- Emerald — Saturated green with an interior that rewards close attention

- Alexandrite — Color-shifting and genuinely unlike anything else

- Moonstone — Blue-white inner glow that moves with the hand

- Ruby — Presence without effort

- Peridot — Bright yellow-green with a lightness no other stone delivers

- Sapphire — Deep blue saturation that anchors the entire set

- Opal — Light held inside the stone

- Citrine — Warm amber that brightens without competing

- Tanzanite — Blue-violet, found in one place on earth

- Turquoise — Sky blue with natural variation

- Black Rutilated Quartz — Gold needle inclusions locked inside clear stone

- Moss Agate — Green inclusions suspended in near-transparent material, each one individual

- Black Onyx — Solid, matte, complete

Shop By Stone Shape

In a bridal set, the stone shape is not just an aesthetic preference. It is the structural decision that everything else in the design responds to — the band profile, the setting height, the way the two rings nest together on the hand.

Round Cut

The most symmetrical cut and the most forgiving in a bridal set context. Round cut allows the wedding band to sit flush without complex engineering — the classic starting point for sets that prioritize clean stacking over visual drama.

Pear Cut

Directional and pointed at one end, pear cut creates a natural visual focus for the set and elongates the hand. The wedding band is designed to cradle the point — the two rings fit together with a specificity that round cuts do not require.

Oval Cut

The most wearable shape for a bridal set worn every day. Oval spreads the visual weight of the stone across the hand, makes the center stone appear larger than its carat weight, and nests cleanly with a curved wedding band.

Kite Cut

Angular and architectural. A kite cut center stone demands a wedding band with the same geometric precision — the result is a set that reads as a deliberate design object rather than a conventional ring pair.

Hexagon Cut

Six-sided and structured. Hexagon cut sets carry a contemporary clarity that makes both rings look intentional — the shape gives the entire system a geometry that round and elongated cuts do not have.

 

Two Rings. Already Solved.

A bridal set does not ask you to figure out the second ring later.

It gives you both rings as a single answer — proportioned together, designed together, made to be worn together from the first day to every day after that.

Explore Molleln bridal sets and find the set that was already complete before you found it.

Molleln Bridal Set Q&A

A bridal set is designed as a complete two-ring system from the beginning. The engagement ring and wedding band share the same proportion logic, metal finish, and design language — so they fit together correctly and read as one piece on the hand. Buying separately means finding a band that works alongside an existing ring, which requires more effort and does not always produce a clean result.

Yes. Each ring in the set functions independently — the engagement ring can be worn alone before the wedding, and the wedding band can be worn alone when practical circumstances call for it. The set is designed to work as a pair, but neither ring requires the other to make sense on its own.

Significantly. Certain shapes — pear, kite, hexagon — require the wedding band to be specifically contoured to sit flush against the engagement ring without a gap. Round and oval cuts are more forgiving. Molleln bridal sets are designed so the wedding band profile matches the requirements of the center stone shape from the start — the fit is not an afterthought.

Molleln bridal sets are designed with a consistent stone across the set, which is what gives the two rings their visual coherence. If you are looking for a set with different stones or a specific combination, customization is available — the design team can work from the correct starting assumptions rather than adapting an existing template.

Molleln bridal sets are available in platinum, 14K gold (white, yellow, and rose), 18K gold, 10K gold, and 925 sterling silver. 10K gold has a higher alloy content than 14K or 18K — it is harder and more resistant to wear, but its lower gold proportion gives it a lighter, paler gold tone, which suits people who prefer a more understated look. 925 sterling silver is a genuine ring material with its own character and appeal, but it has different wear boundaries from gold and platinum — it requires more regular maintenance and may show wear over time under daily use conditions. Both rings in the set use the same metal — this is one of the core design decisions that makes the set read as a unified piece. A full breakdown of how metal choice affects durability, appearance, and cost is in our  Ring Metal Guide.

The same way you care for any fine ring worn daily — avoid exposure to harsh chemicals, remove before activities that put the setting under mechanical stress, and have the prongs inspected every one to two years. Multi-stone and pavé settings on the wedding band warrant particular attention to prong integrity over time. A full guide to setting types and their maintenance requirements is in our Ring Setting Guide.

Generally yes. Because both rings are designed and produced as a system, the material and setting costs are optimized across the pair rather than treated as two independent purchases. The result is a complete two-ring set at a price point that reflects that efficiency.