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No Worries — Everything Is Customizable!If a specific style or shape doesn’t display any products, rest assured that every piece at Beverly’s Jewelry is fully customizable.
Choose any design you love from our collection, and we can craft it to your preferences — from classic styles to unique shapes and special details.
If you don’t see it, we can still make it happen.
Your perfect sparkle is always possible with Beverly’s.
What Makes Channel Set Diamond Rings Different
The channel setting stands apart from other ring styles because of how it holds its stones. Instead of prongs gripping each diamond individually, the stones are set into a continuous groove cut directly into the band, with the channel walls bearing the weight and securing the girdle on both sides. The result is a row of diamonds that sits perfectly level, catches light evenly, and never risks a prong lifting or snagging fabric during daily wear. It's a design that rewards close inspection — the precision required to set each stone at uniform height, with no gaps and no overlapping, is a mark of real craftsmanship. If you want to understand how the channel setting compares to other styles before deciding, our engagement ring settings page shows the full range of options Beverly's offers, and our blog on diamond ring settings explained breaks down 18 styles with clear comparisons.
Channel Set Wedding Bands and Bridal Pairing
A channel set wedding band sits flush against almost any engagement ring profile — solitaire, halo, or three-stone — because the smooth surface leaves no gaps and creates no friction against an adjacent ring. This makes it one of the most practical and popular choices for a bridal set. The channel setting also works exceptionally well for men's wedding bands, where a row of diamonds adds presence without the vulnerability of exposed prongs. For couples building a coordinated set, our women's wedding bands and men's wedding bands both include channel set diamond options across all metal types. If you're thinking about how to stack your bands after the wedding, our blog on ring stacking 101 covers the most flattering combinations.
Diamond Shapes and Metal Choices for Channel Set Rings
Round brilliant and princess cut diamonds are the most widely used in channel settings because their symmetry fills the groove cleanly and maximizes light return across the band. Emerald cut and baguette diamonds are excellent for wider channel bands, where their step-cut faceting creates a different kind of elegance — quieter, more linear, and very sophisticated. For metal, white gold is the most popular choice for channel set rings because it keeps the visual focus on the diamonds themselves. Yellow gold adds warmth that flatters near-colorless stones, rose gold brings contrast to the channel's clean geometry, and platinum offers the highest durability of any metal with no color change over time. Our Gold 101 guide covers karat purity and long-term care if you're still deciding between metal types.