Design overview
A dual-stone ring direction where intertwined movement needs to frame both focal areas without looking unstable.

A dual-stone ring direction where intertwined movement needs to frame both focal areas without looking unstable. DMJ Concept uses this statement ring CAD page to align on design direction before moving the strongest option into custom jewelry development or a manufacturing brief.
A dual-stone ring direction where intertwined movement needs to frame both focal areas without looking unstable.
Define the relationship between the two stones, keep the entwined paths legible, and hold a clear center of gravity in the top view.
The strongest version keeps one clear focal plane, a stable shank transition, and enough inner comfort to survive beyond the first render.
This ring needs secure support for both stones, enough metal continuity through the crossing structure, and finishing access around the intersections.
Use the material direction to support the main silhouette first, then review finishing access and structural thickness before manufacturing decisions are locked.
Stone cues on this page point to diamond as the clearest focal references, so the setting plan should stay subordinate to the main CAD silhouette instead of overcrowding it.
Useful for clients choosing a two-stone custom ring and needing CAD to clarify balance before manufacturing starts.
DMJ Concept uses this statement ring CAD page to align on design direction before moving the strongest option into custom jewelry development or a manufacturing brief.
Examine this sophisticated CAD model, an exquisite design blueprint engineered for custom production and creative reinterpretation.
The current page keeps the main CAD direction visible before deeper modeling work starts.
The visible signals on this page currently include Rings / Statement / CAD render, which helps the design direction stay easy to compare without adding unverified specs.
The related links on this page work best as a comparison set for nearby statement directions and rings references before the next brief is narrowed down.