How Dubai’s Jewellery Buyers Are Redefining Elegance
My cousin got engaged last year. She spent three weekends visiting jewellery stores across Dubai and came home from every single visit looking slightly disappointed. Too similar. Everything looked the same. She wanted a ring that felt like hers and not like the one sitting on three other fingers at any given brunch in JBR.
She eventually found what she was looking for. An old-cut lab-grown diamond set in a vintage-inspired band. She cried when she put it on.
That story is playing out across the UAE right now more than most people realise.
Something Genuinely Different Is Happening in UAE Jewellery Right Now
Nobody planned this shift. It was not a marketing campaign or a trend report that started it. Buyers simply started coming into stores asking for something with more character and jewellers started paying attention.
Old-cut diamonds. Vintage settings. Designs that look like they belong to a different century. Requests like these used to be rare in the Gulf market. Today they are becoming a regular part of the conversation.
iBling Jewels and Dvik Jewels are two names that have noticed this shift early. Both are expanding their vintage-style lab-grown diamond collections in the UAE in 2026 and neither of them is doing it as a gamble. The demand was already sitting there waiting to be met.
So What Exactly Is an Old-Cut Diamond
Most people have only ever seen modern brilliant cut diamonds. The ones with 57 or 58 perfectly symmetrical facets that catch light from every angle and throw it back at you in sharp flashes. They are technically flawless. Every single one looks almost identical to the next.
Old-cut diamonds worked differently.
Old Mine Cut and Old European Cut
Before industrial cutting machines existed craftsmen shaped diamonds by hand using candlelight as their guide. The result was stones with broader facets, a slightly domed top, a smaller table and a light return that is warm and soft rather than sharp and icy. Old Mine Cut and Old European Cut are the two styles you hear about most often and both are now finding serious fans among UAE buyers.
Hold an old-cut stone next to a modern brilliant cut and you will immediately understand why people feel something different looking at it. There is a quality to it that feels almost alive. A glow rather than a flash. People who see it tend to keep looking at it rather than looking away.
Why This Matters to a New Generation of Buyers
The people driving demand for these stones in the UAE are mostly in their late twenties and thirties. They have grown up surrounded by things that are optimised, standardised and mass produced. Their reaction to all of that is to actively hunt for things that feel genuinely individual.
A modern brilliant cut is objectively perfect. That is also its problem. There is no story in perfection. Nothing that makes one stone different from the next. Old-cut stones carry the marks of how they were made. No two are exactly alike. For buyers who are tired of wearing the same thing as everyone else, that difference is not a small thing. It is everything.
Bridal Is Where This Trend Hits Differently
Engagement rings and bridal jewellery have always been serious business in the UAE and Gulf. These are not casual purchases. They carry family meaning, cultural weight and in many cases represent the single most expensive personal purchase someone makes in their twenties.
When the stakes are that high people stop defaulting to whatever is most popular and start thinking hard about what they actually want. And what a growing number of them actually want right now is something that could not have been bought off any shelf.
Bespoke orders featuring old-cut lab-grown diamonds have been climbing steadily across the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Buyers are coming in with photographs saved on their phones. Images of antique pieces from family collections or from global auction houses. They know exactly the feeling they are after and they want a jeweller who can help them get there using a lab-grown stone.
The lab-grown part matters for reasons beyond ethics. Lab-grown diamonds are physically and chemically the same as mined diamonds. A trained gemologist cannot tell the difference without specialist equipment. But they cost significantly less which means buyers can put more of their budget into the design, the setting and the craftsmanship rather than simply the size of the stone.
What iBling Jewels and Dvik Jewels Are Actually Doing
These two brands did not decide to expand their vintage collections because they read a trend report. They expanded because customers kept asking for things they did not have enough of.
The inquiries were already there. People coming in having done their own research. Already knowing the difference between an Old Mine Cut and an Old European Cut. They already decided on the aesthetic they wanted. The brands responded by building out collections and customisation options that could actually meet that level of specificity.
This is how good retail moves. Not by predicting what people will want in two years but by paying close enough attention to what they are already asking for today.
Fashion and Celebrity Culture Got Here First
The Red Carpet Started Changing the Conversation
Victorian and Edwardian jewelry pieces have been featured in campaigns worldwide and in many prestigious red carpet appearances in the past few years. But as many well-known public figures chose to wear the traditions of Victorian and Edwardian designs when gracing red carpet events, the style also changed perception of the common man.
What looked old-fashioned starts looking distinctive. What seemed like something from a museum starts seeming like something worth having. The Gulf market has felt this influence just as much as any other and the timing lines up almost exactly with the uptick in vintage-inspired requests that jewellers across Dubai and Abu Dhabi have been describing.
Luxury Showcases Gave It Credibility
When vintage and antique-inspired collections start appearing at the upper end of international luxury jewellery showcases it stops being a niche interest and starts being a legitimate category. That repositioning matters to buyers in the UAE who are highly attuned to where something sits within the broader luxury hierarchy.
Vintage is not a budget option anymore. In 2026 it sits comfortably alongside modern luxury as a different and equally valid choice for buyers who have thought carefully about what they want.
Where the UAE Jewellery Market Goes From Here
Lab-grown diamond awareness in the UAE has jumped considerably in the past couple of years. More buyers understand what these stones are and are making considered decisions to choose them. The vintage-cut segment is riding that wave but also adding something to it. People who come in looking for a lab-grown stone and discover old-cut options often find that the vintage aesthetic completely changes what they thought they wanted.
It has a way of becoming a preference rather than a single purchase. Someone who buys an old-cut lab-grown diamond engagement ring tends to come back for earrings. Then a pendant. Then something for a family member.
The UAE sits in a strong position for this trend to keep growing. A resident population that values both personal expression and jewellery as a meaningful investment. A bridal market that rewards design that stands apart. A growing number of brands are willing to take customisation seriously.
If you have spent any time feeling like everything in the jewellery stores around you looks exactly the same, you are not imagining it. And you are also not alone. The people walking into iBling Jewels and Dvik Jewels right now felt the same way before they found what they were actually looking for.
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