
Aurate New York
Lab Grown Diamond Georgian Tennis Bracelet
Reviewed by the The Top Finds editors · How we test
You'll complete your purchase on Aurate New York's site · price checked May 20
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Best for
Someone with a smaller wrist who wears yellow gold daily and wants a tennis bracelet that looks like a considered purchase rather than a category default.
Skip if
Your wrist measures 6.5 inches or larger, you prefer white or rose gold, or you're shopping purely on carat weight per dollar.
Price tier
Luxury
$3028
The verdict
Aurate's Georgian Tennis Bracelet is one of the few pieces in the lab-grown category that actually earns its $3,000 price tag — the five-prong Georgian setting gives each diamond a presence you don't see on the standard four-claw designs that have flooded the market.
What we love
- Five-prong Georgian setting catches light differently than commodity four-prong designs — noticeably more dimension
- 14k gold is the right durability sweet spot for daily-wear fine jewelry
- Lab-grown diamonds deliver real sparkle with a lower ethical and environmental footprint than mined
- Matches a full Georgian suite (necklace, earrings) if you want the coordinated look
- Aurate's construction quality is a step above most DTC fine jewelry brands at this price
Worth knowing
- 6-inch length fits only smaller wrists — check your measurement before ordering
- Yellow gold only, which rules it out for buyers who wear primarily white or silver-toned metals
- At $3,028, you're paying a design and brand premium; pure carat-value shoppers will find more TW elsewhere
- Individual stones are modest in size — this reads as shimmer, not statement, which is a style constraint for some
Our review
What makes this different from every other tennis bracelet right now
The tennis bracelet has become ubiquitous to the point of invisibility. Walk into any fine jewelry brand's lab-grown collection and you'll find the same continuous line of four-prong set stones — clean, yes, but interchangeable. Aurate's Georgian setting is the thing that actually stops us.
Georgian-era jewelry, made before machine production, was characterized by elaborate handcraft and settings designed to maximize candlelight. The five-prong configuration here borrows that logic: five claws mean more metal catching and diffracting light at slightly different angles than the standard four. In practice, the bracelet reads as livelier on the wrist — less mirror-flat, more like something that has dimension.
The lab-grown question
At $3,028, this sits at the upper edge of the lab-grown tennis bracelet market. Worth addressing directly: lab-grown diamonds are chemically and optically identical to mined diamonds, and Aurate has built its brand on responsible sourcing and transparent pricing. The 2-carat total weight spread across a 6-inch bracelet means each individual stone is modest in size — this is a shimmer piece, not a statement solitaire. That's the right format for a tennis bracelet, but it's worth knowing.
What you're paying for here is the setting quality, the 14k gold (which holds up better to daily wear than 10k and is more durable than 18k), and Aurate's finish standards. We've handled enough of their pieces to say the construction is notably more precise than most DTC brands at similar prices.
Wearing it
At 6 inches, this runs short — it's sized for a wrist on the smaller end of average. If you wear a 6.5 or 7-inch bracelet, reach out to Aurate about sizing before ordering. Yellow gold is the only option listed, which is a deliberate aesthetic call: the warmth of 14k yellow against the near-colorless sparkle of lab diamonds is genuinely beautiful, but it forecloses white gold and rose gold for buyers who wear primarily silver-toned jewelry.
The bracelet is part of a full Georgian suite — matching necklace and drop earrings exist — which is either useful context or a temptation depending on your budget situation.
The honest value calculation
If you're comparison-shopping strictly on carats-per-dollar, you can find more total diamond weight for $3,000 elsewhere. What you're buying from Aurate is a setting with genuine design intent, a brand with a legible point of view, and construction quality that shows up in how the piece sits on your wrist. For a bracelet you plan to wear daily, that's not a frivolous consideration.
Common questions
Lab Grown Diamond Georgian Tennis Bracelet, answered
Are Aurate lab-grown diamonds real diamonds?
Yes. Lab-grown diamonds are chemically and optically identical to mined diamonds — same hardness, same refractive index, same sparkle. The difference is origin: they're grown in a controlled environment rather than extracted from the earth.
What is a Georgian setting on a tennis bracelet?
Georgian-era jewelry (roughly 1714–1837) was made before industrialization, characterized by ornate, light-catching metalwork. Aurate's Georgian setting uses five prongs per stone instead of the standard four, which creates slightly more metal faceting around each diamond and gives the bracelet more visual depth.
Is 6 inches the only size available?
The bracelet is listed at 6 inches. If you typically wear a 6.5 or 7-inch bracelet, contact Aurate directly before purchasing — some fine jewelry brands accommodate sizing requests on their core pieces.
How does this compare to a mined diamond tennis bracelet at the same price?
A mined diamond tennis bracelet at $3,028 would likely have less total carat weight, or lower stone quality, than the lab-grown version. Lab-grown production costs are significantly lower, so the savings pass through as more diamond for your dollar — the trade-off is resale value, which is lower for lab-grown.
Can I wear this bracelet every day?
14k gold is a durable choice for daily wear — harder and more scratch-resistant than 18k, and more refined than 10k. Prong settings do require periodic inspection (a jeweler can check them annually) to make sure no stones have loosened.
Does this come with a certificate or documentation for the diamonds?
Aurate doesn't publish grading certificate details in their product listings. Contact them directly to ask about documentation — reputable lab-grown diamonds are often certified by IGI or GCAL.
Ready to buy
Lab Grown Diamond Georgian Tennis Bracelet
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