Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite* The Jaylin Morganite and Diamond Halo Engagement Ring | Lisa Robin
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite* The Jaylin Morganite and Diamond Halo Engagement Ring | Lisa Robin
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite* The Jaylin Morganite and Diamond Halo Engagement Ring | Lisa Robin
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite
Shown in 1.0 carat Morganite* The Jaylin Morganite and Diamond Halo Engagement Ring | Lisa Robin

The Jaylin Morganite Engagement Ring with Floral Diamond Halo

The Jaylin is a halo that softens into petals rather than holding to a circle. Accent diamonds gather in floral clusters that wrap the morganite center in something closer to garden geometry than concentric rings.
Regular price$ 2,295.00
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Color
Shape

How does the Jaylin floral halo differ from a standard round halo?

A standard halo wraps the morganite in a continuous ring of small diamonds. The Jaylin replaces that circle with petal-shaped clusters of accent diamonds, giving the morganite botanical context rather than uniform geometry.

How is a floral halo constructed differently from a round halo?

A round halo places small accent diamonds in a continuous ring around the morganite center. A floral halo replaces that uniform ring with petal-shaped clusters — small groups of accent diamonds gathered as if forming petals around the central stone.

What's the difference between a halo and a cluster morganite engagement ring?

A halo morganite engagement ring wraps the center in a continuous ring of small accent diamonds. A cluster setting groups accent diamonds in irregular formations that don't form a closed circle — leaf-like groupings, scattered constellations, asymmetric arrangements.

Our guided approach to customizing each ring with intention and clarity.

Every Lisa Robin ring is made to order, which means your design can be thoughtfully refined—even when ordering online. Whether you’re adjusting a detail or evolving the design, we guide you through each decision to ensure the final piece feels cohesive and entirely yours.

Design Refinements can be explored after your initial order, with any pricing adjustments clearly outlined and approved before crafting begins.

Refinement options include but are not limited to:

  • Adjusting the width or taper of the band (shank)
  • Modifying or adding side diamonds for additional detail or presence
  • Changing the prong style (claw, round, double prong, etc.)
  • Adjusting the number of prongs for both aesthetic and structure
  • Refining the basket design for a different profile or overall look
  • Selecting your preferred metal type and color
  • Adapting the design to better coordinate with a wedding ring
Made to order — Your diamond engagement ring ships in 3-4 weeks, approximately Jul 11 to Jul 15
Shipping costs calculated at checkout

A Halo Softened into Petals

A halo doesn't have to be a circle. The Jaylin replaces the concentric ring of brilliance with a wreath of petals.

The morganite at the center carries the rest of the design's color responsibility. Morganites come in a remarkable range — blush pink through peach to the rarer salmon and deep peach of fine specimens. A colored gemstone engagement ring with a morganite center is as much about which morganite as about which setting: a blush reads soft against rose gold, a peach glows against yellow gold, a deep salmon reads warm against white gold. Morganite is softer than sapphire (7.5-8 Mohs), which makes the protective setting style here important — bezels and halos protect the stone from everyday wear. Most couples come to a morganite engagement ring expecting one color and leave open to the range.

On the hand, the Jaylin reads romantic and organic rather than geometric — the petal arrangement gives the morganite botanical context, soft rather than ornate. The Jaylin joins a Lisa Robin tradition of halo and botanical engagement rings designed for couples drawn to floral form.

How Lisa Robin Designs Your Gemstone Engagement Ring

From gemstone selection to CAD approval, every decision is guided by Lisa personally.

Online Ordering
Begin your custom gemstone engagement ring through a guided online experience designed to bring clarity to each decision. From understanding gemstone options to exploring engagement ring settings, the process is supported by in-depth educational resources throughout the site.

If you'd like to personalize your design, you can place your order at any time — we'll follow up to refine the details and ensure everything aligns with your preferences.

Private Design Appointments
For a more collaborative experience, work with us one-on-one, either in person or virtually. Your engagement ring consultation is tailored to you — we guide you through each decision in real time, shaping your gemstone engagement ring with clarity and intention.

Browse available certified gemstones sourced from trusted suppliers through the Lisa Robin gemstone collection.

As you explore your engagement ring, you can review gemstones by variety, color, and overall presence to select the one that best complements your design.

We guide you through how each gemstone interacts with your setting — so the final ring feels balanced, intentional, and cohesive.

Certified natural gemstones are available through the online selection. Lab created gemstones can be made available by appointment — contact us to discuss your options.

Before your ring is hand-crafted, you’ll review detailed CAD renderings created using your diamond’s exact dimensions.

Multiple views allow proportions, balance, and design details to be carefully considered—so you can feel confident in how your engagement ring design will come together before crafting begins.

If a wedding ring is selected within the same order, renderings will also show each ring individually and together, helping you understand how they pair and flow as a set.

Once your design is approved, your ring is hand-crafted specifically for you using carefully selected materials and an ethically sourced gemstone.

Each ring is a made to order engagement ring, typically completed in approximately 3-4 weeks.

You can choose secure, fully insured shipping or private studio pickup. Throughout the process, we remain available to guide you — so you always know what to expect at every stage.

What our customers say about their Lisa Robin Gemstone Engagement Rings

I loved working with Lisa Robin! It was so easy to create exactly what I wanted. With some minor changes to Lisa's gorgeous styles, I had the perfect wedding ring to coordinate with my Lisa Robin Engagement Ring. Can’t wait to add another ring to my stack.

Abby and Zane
Blountville, Tennessee

Our experience with Lisa Robin was delightful. We found our Lisa Robin engagement ring Instagram and then picked out and bought our wedding rings online. Every question we had was answered quickly. Lisa made us feel special and guided us in the right direction. When we got our rings, they were just what we wanted, expressing our style and love perfectly. We are so happy with how everything turned out.

Mary Katherine and Adam
Columbus, Ohio

Find Your Matching Wedding Band

The Jaylin Morganite Engagement Ring with Floral Diamond Halo

Frequently Asked Questions About Gemstone Engagement Rings

With some care, yes. Morganite is a 7.5-8 on the Mohs hardness scale — softer than diamond or sapphire but harder than glass — which means it suits everyday wear when set protectively. The bezels, halos, and side accents in this collection shield the corners and crown of a softer stone from daily impact.
The morganite family includes blush pink through peach to the rarer salmon and deep peach of fine specimens. The deepest peach and salmon shades are the rarest and most prized, with most morganite on the market falling in the lighter blush range.
Morganites have symbolized compassion, emotional connection, and unconditional love for centuries. Named in 1911 for J.P. Morgan, morganite carries a more contemporary meaning than older gemstones — compassion, emotional connection, the soft side of commitment.
Brazilian morganites (Minas Gerais) produce the largest and most saturated stones, including the rare deep peach material that commands top prices. Madagascar morganites offer good color at accessible prices
At Lisa Robin, settings start at $2,095 and range to approximately $3,295 in 14K gold for the most intricate halo and cluster designs. Platinum adds up to $400. A 1 carat morganite often starts around $150 for commercial quality and reaches into the high hundreds per carat for fine Brazilian material with deep saturation. The morganite itself drives most of the variation in final price.
All four metals we offer pair beautifully with morganite, but each combination reads differently. Morganite was made for rose gold — the warm metal deepens the blush. Yellow gold reads softer and slightly retro. White gold and platinum cool the stone into something more delicate.
Shape is part personal taste and part hand proportion. Cushion and oval cuts are the most popular for morganite — the elongated geometry shows color cleanly and reads romantic. Round cuts are classic. Emerald cuts read modern and architectural. Pear and marquise cuts add length but expose vulnerable corners on a softer stone. Longer hands often suit round and cushion shapes; shorter fingers often benefit from pear, oval, or marquise.
Yes. Every Lisa Robin morganite engagement ring is custom: you choose the morganite (color, shape, origin, clarity, size), select a setting from our collection or modify one, and choose your metal and finger size. If you want a design that does not exist here, we work with you to create something entirely new. Custom morganite rings are crafted in 3-4 weeks from design approval.
Approximately 3-4 weeks from the time you approve the final design. From design approval, our workshop crafts each ring individually — there is no warehouse inventory at Lisa Robin. The 3-4 week timeline applies to both our signature designs and custom work.
Lab-created morganites are available by request. They are not displayed in our online feed because each one is sourced individually based on your color, size, and clarity preferences. Lab-grown stones are chemically and structurally identical to mined ones — same beryl, same hardness — and typically cost less than natural stones of comparable quality.