Connect with us

Brands/Products

How the Oval Shape Enhances the Sparkle of Your Diamond Ring

Published

on

Oval Diamond Ring

If you’re celebrating a special moment in your life, such as an anniversary or a proposal, a diamond ring is an elegant choice to mark that day in the lives of your loved ones. When you’re out looking for the perfect diamond ring to choose from, the shape of the diamond should be a key consideration.

There are a number of different things that can influence the brilliance of a diamond, but the shape and cut of your stone is perhaps the most important. Trendy diamond shapes are everywhere these days, but one unique shape has remained popular over the years – the oval shape.

The oval diamond features a long shape and faceted cut that not only produces a stunning glint but also makes the gemstone look larger. In this article, we’ll explore the way in which the oval cut adds to the sparkle of your diamond ring and how it’s an evergreen choice for any jewelry collection.

Why Choose an Oval Diamond Ring? A Look at the 4Cs

Any seasoned jeweler or frequent diamond buyer will stress the importance of the 4Cs—Cut, Color, Clarity, and Carat Weight— when selecting diamonds that are beautiful and valuable.

Based on the 4Cs, the oval cut is special because it improves each of these factors more than other cuts would. Now, let’s look at oval cuts based on the 4Cs and why they are perfect for those seeking brilliance, beauty, and value.

Cut

A diamond’s cut has a direct influence on its capacity to bend light, and an oval diamond ring is created to maximize brilliance. As a result of its brilliant-cut faceting plan (which comes very close to that of a round-cut diamond), an oval diamond reflects and spreads light in order to produce improved sparkle.

Besides this, its longer shape can minimize the visibility of imperfections while maintaining an awe-inspiring glow.

Color

Oval diamonds also do a great job at color concealment, especially in higher grades. Since they’re faceted in a unique way and do a great job bending light, you’re going to have a whiter-looking diamond than most other fancy cuts,  making oval gems great even if you choose to buy a slightly lower color grade.

Oval diamonds allow you to save on more expensive color grades and concentrate on the other 4Cs of a diamond without sacrificing quality and appearance.

Clarity

Clarity describes the presence of inclusions and blemishes in a diamond. Oval cuts conceal small inclusions better than step-cut shapes like emerald or Asscher cuts. This gives you the option to choose a lower clarity grade and still have an amazing-looking stone.

Carat Weight

One of the greatest strengths of an oval diamond is its ability to seem larger than it is. Its shape makes it appear like a larger stone when compared to a round diamond of equal weight. This special trait makes oval diamonds the best option for individuals who need maximum visual appeal without having to raise their budget significantly.

Best Settings for Oval Diamonds

After you explore the beauty of oval diamond rings and select a diamond on Best Brilliance, the next thing you need to do is select the perfect setting for the gem. Your chosen setting should enhance the oval cut’s brilliance, protect its shape, and complement its elongated elegance.

The appropriate setting not only ensures your diamond’s safety but also influences how much light it reflects. Below, we’ve highlighted some of the best settings to showcase the beauty of an oval diamond.

Solitaire Setting – Timeless & Classic

Solitaire settings will flaunt your gemstone’s beauty in a unique way. An oval cut solitaire setting consists of one oval diamond set on a plain or delicate band, with the stone in the spotlight.

This traditional style is great for optimizing light exposure and shine. If you like a clean but elegant look that enhances the natural beauty of your diamond, then the solitaire setting will suit you best.

Split Shank Setting – Fashionable & Supportive

A split shank setting includes a band that splits into two as it approaches the center stone. This gives it extra strength and also an appealing beauty. The setup gives the ring more presence as the set appears thinner while the diamond looks larger. Split shank settings suit buyers who are looking for a mixture of poise, solidity, and glamour.

East-West Setting – Cool & Radical

An east-west setting is a new take on traditional engagement rings, with a horizontal oval diamond instead of a vertical position. The radical styling establishes a modern yet chic appearance without diminishing the elegance of the oval cut. If you prefer something fresh and unique, an east-west setting offers an alternative to classic ring styles.

The Timeless Brilliance of Oval Diamonds

Oval diamonds are the perfect blend of beauty, glow, and sophistication. Understanding how an oval diamond maximizes brilliance and provides buyers with elegance is important. Choosing the best setting is equally as important to take advantage of a unique set style and elevate the appeal of your ring. With the utmost care and regular upkeep, an oval diamond ring is sure to be a timeless piece that will make whatever event you’re celebrating special.

Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Brands/Products

Reputation Economy: How Nigerian Brands Won and Lost Public Trust in 2025

Published

on

Reputation Economy

Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence consultancy, P+ Measurement Services, has released its 2025 Industry Media Reputation Report, revealing that corporate reputation has emerged as one of the most decisive assets for Nigerian companies, rivaling financial performance and market share in shaping public trust.

The report analysed and audited thousands of print and online news reports published in 2025 across the banking, insurance, telecommunications, and e-hailing sectors. In total, coverage of 29 commercial banks, 13 insurance companies, five e-hailing platforms, and four telecommunications operators was examined to determine how corporate actions translated into public perception.

According to the findings, rising operational costs, currency pressures, regulatory scrutiny, labour relations, and service reliability now directly influence how brands are judged in the media and by stakeholders.

“Reputation is no longer a soft outcome of publicity. It is a measurable business asset shaped by corporate behaviour, governance quality, customer experience, and crisis response,” said a Senior Analyst at P+ Measurement Services, Ms Tumininu Balogun.

She added, “For more than a decade, we have been at the forefront of media intelligence in Nigeria. Our commitment to the PR and communications industry is to ensure that reliable media data and actionable insight are always available, so professionals can move beyond intuition and make truly data-driven decisions.”

E-Hailing Industry: Driver Relations Reshaped Corporate Reputation

The e-hailing sector recorded one of the clearest shifts in reputation dynamics in 2025, driven largely by labour policies and platform economics.

inDrive Nigeria led the sector with 39% of positive reputation share, following extensive media coverage of its decision to reduce driver commission to 0.1% during peak hours in Abuja. Bolt Nigeria followed with 32%, supported by reports on its electric tricycle deployment in Lagos. LagRide recorded 17%, driven by coverage of its electric vehicle infrastructure partnership, while Uber Nigeria accounted for 11% and Rida 1%.

On the negative reputation scale, Bolt recorded the highest share at 40%, linked to driver protests following fare reduction policies. Uber accounted for 29%, inDrive 20%, LagRide 8%, and Rida 3%, largely associated with reports on strike threats, platform reliability concerns, and driver earnings disputes.

The report notes that how platforms treat drivers has become as influential to reputation as rider experience.

Banking Industry: Profitability Confronted by Governance Risk

Among commercial banks, Stanbic IBTC recorded the strongest positive reputation position at 26%, driven by recognition as KPMG’s top retail bank. Zenith Bank followed with 22%, supported by dividend payout coverage. Fidelity Bank (19%), UBA (17%), and FirstBank (16%) gained positive reputation visibility through education initiatives, digital service upgrades, and branch automation projects.

However, reputational exposure remained significant. GTCO recorded the highest negative reputation share at 28%, followed by FirstBank at 26%, FCMB at 18%, and both UBA and Ecobank at 14%, mainly due to media reports concerning legal disputes, fraud investigations, and customer-related controversies.

The report highlights that in the banking sector, strong earnings and digital innovation strengthen reputation, but governance failures can rapidly undermine it.

Insurance Industry: Financial Stability and Data Protection Define Trust

In the insurance sector, AXA Mansard led positive reputation share with 36%, followed by Leadway Assurance (29%), AIICO (16%), NEM Insurance (11%), and SanlamAllianz (8%).

AXA Mansard also accounted for the highest negative reputation exposure at 68%, driven by reports of a significant decline in pre-tax profit. AIICO recorded 18%, Leadway 12%, and NEM 2%, largely connected to regulatory matters and data protection concerns, including coverage of customer data breaches.

The findings indicate that insurers are now judged as much by financial resilience and cybersecurity posture as by product offerings.

Telecommunications Industry: Infrastructure Investment Meets Rising Public Expectations

MTN Nigeria led positive reputation share with 47%, driven by infrastructure expansion narratives and innovation campaigns. Glo followed with 28%, Airtel Nigeria with 16%, and T2 (formerly 9mobile) with 9%, largely supported by its rebranding coverage.

On the negative reputation side, MTN recorded 44%, T2 31%, Glo 13%, and Airtel 12%, influenced by reports on service quality challenges and the Nigeria Labour Congress boycott directive targeting telecommunications operators.

The sector’s results suggest that while capital investment enhances visibility, network reliability and customer experience increasingly determine long-term reputation.

Reputation Has Become a Strategic Business Asset

Across all four industries, the report finds a consistent pattern: reputation in 2025 closely followed corporate behaviour.

Brands that demonstrated transparency, operational fairness, financial discipline, digital reliability, and customer focus were more likely to build positive public trust. Companies facing labour unrest, legal disputes, regulatory sanctions, data breaches, or service disruptions saw these issues rapidly reflected in their reputation profile.

For brand owners, investors, regulators, and communication professionals, the implication is clear: reputation is no longer managed only through messaging, but through measurable actions that are permanently recorded in the media ecosystem and searchable online.

Continue Reading

Brands/Products

Nigeria Must Accelerate Adoption of Renewable Energy Solutions—JMG

Published

on

JMG Renewable Energy Solutions

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

A leading provider of integrated electromechanical solutions in Nigeria, JMG Limited, recently showcased real-world impact of its solar and hybrid energy solutions across key sectors of the economy to members of the media.

At the media tour held at JMG’s head office in Lagos, the Chief Commercial Officer of JMG, Mr Rabih Jammal, stressed the urgent need for Nigeria to accelerate its adoption of renewable energy solutions.

“Clean energy is no longer a future concept – it is happening now – and it is working. At JMG, we are not just advocating for renewables; we are delivering them.

“From our 150-kilowatt solar installation at our Victoria Island head office to multiple large-scale deployments nationwide, we have proven that clean energy works technically, commercially and financially,” he said at the event hosted to commemorate the International Day of Clean Energy.

According to him, JMG’s solar and hybrid projects have helped clients save millions of naira in diesel costs, improve energy reliability and significantly reduce carbon emissions.

“As more countries move toward sustainable solutions, clean energy has become an economic imperative for Nigeria. It enhances competitiveness, lowers operating costs and enables communities. This is only the beginning as we will continue to invest in solar solutions, technology, partnerships and people to scale clean energy across the country,” he added.

Also speaking, the Head of Marketing at JMG, Ms Oluwatomi Faniran, described clean energy as a core responsibility embedded in the company’s business strategy.

“At JMG, clean energy is more than technology; it is a responsibility. Our track record speaks for itself,” Ms Faniran said, highlighting the successful deployment of solar hybrid systems at NIPCO fuel stations, the powering of a government state house, and energy-efficient solutions delivered at facilities such as Nourdm Global and Rack Centre.

With decades of experience delivering solutions that enhance comfort, safety and efficiency across residential, commercial and industrial spaces, JMG operates across critical business units including conventional and renewable power, electrical infrastructure, HVAC systems, elevators and escalators, air compressors and energy-efficient technologies. Its operations are backed by internationally recognised ISO certifications in quality management, health and safety, and environmental sustainability.

Continue Reading

Brands/Products

Paystack Launches Holding Company The Stack Group

Published

on

The Stack Group

By Adedapo Adesanya

Top payment solutions company, Paystack, has launched a holding company, known as The Stack Group (TSG), in its bid to aggregate the tech-focused family of brands connected with the Paystack brand.

TSG founding shareholders include Stripe, Shola Akinlade (Founder and CEO of Paystack), and existing Paystack employees. The agreements establishing TSG as the parent holding company were signed in October 2025, and are subject to the requisite regulatory approvals.

The announcement comes as Paystack celebrates its 10-year anniversary in January 2026.

Since its acquisition by Stripe in 2020, Paystack has grown its payment volume by 12x and is licensed and operational in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, with regulatory approvals for Egypt and Rwanda, representing 46 per cent of Africa’s GDP, the company said in a press statement.

The statement added that this product-first approach to pan-African growth has led to Paystack becoming profitable at the group level.

The development follows the recent launch of Paystack MFB in Nigeria after it acquired Ladder Microfinance Bank in its push into consumer products.

The company noted that as a standalone bank, Paystack MFB allows the group to internalise core financial rails and provide the banking and credit infrastructure required by over 300,000 Nigerian merchants.

“These capabilities enable the development of elegant, compliant, and much-needed end-to-end money-movement solutions and will continue to power the company’s mission of building technology solutions for Africa, to power African ambition,” parts of the statement added.

TSG will provide a corporate umbrella for a family of complementary brands that are solving Africa-specific challenges, while remaining operationally independent. At the outset, TSG will include merchant payments solution, Paystack, its controversial consumer payments product, Zap, the recently launched Paystack Microfinance Bank and TSG Labs, which will serve as hub for  emerging technologies and building new products both within and beyond financial technology.

According to Mr Akinlade, “The launch of TSG signals a larger scope of ambition for us and sets the tone for the next decade of our company. Having worked with thousands of companies across the continent since 2016, it is clear that there are significant opportunities to support businesses beyond payments, and TSG enables us to address the challenges African companies face.”

“Thank you to the Stripe team for their continued belief in Africa’s potential, and our ability to create transformative technology companies for the continent, and beyond,” he added.

Continue Reading

Trending