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Verev Simple Bracelet — view 1

Verev

Verev Simple Bracelet

One disc. One wire. One diamond.

A slim 18k yellow gold bangle with a single disc element holding one bezel-set round brilliant diamond — the Verev language at its most reduced

Materials

  • 18k Yellow Gold

    Round wire bangle with oval disc element, mirror polish throughout

  • Round Brilliant Diamond

    Single stone, bezel-set flush in oval disc

Techniques

Wire FormingDisc CastingBezel SettingMirror Polish

Dimensions

  • inner Diameter58mm
  • wire Thickness1.8mm
  • disc Sizeoval, approximately 10mm × 8mm

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Each piece is handcrafted to order. Contact us to discuss customization options or to schedule a private viewing.

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About This Piece

The bangle is a single round wire of 18k yellow gold, bent into a circle and fitted with a push clasp. The wire is slim — almost nothing — and the surface is mirror-polished throughout.

At the top of the arc sits an oval disc, cast and soldered directly onto the wire. The disc is part of the Verev vocabulary: a smooth, domed surface with a single round brilliant diamond bezel-set at its centre. The diamond sits flush with the dome, its table at the same level as the surrounding metal, so that from a distance the disc reads as a single element — gold interrupted by a point of light.

The geometry is deliberate: a wide oval disc on a thin wire creates a ratio of weight to line that draws the eye upward to the stone while the rest of the bangle disappears against the wrist. There is nothing else to it. No texture, no engraving, no secondary elements.

This is the Verev collection reduced to its simplest statement.

The Story

The Simple Bracelet came from asking what the minimum version of the Verev language looked like. The Bubble Bracelet uses multiple discs scattered across the arc; the Drop Bracelet uses one disc but adds a chain clasp. This version removes the clasp complexity — just the oval disc, one stone, and the wire. Getting the disc-to-wire proportion right was the only real challenge: too small and the disc reads as a detail rather than a feature, too large and the piece loses its delicacy.