
By Amy Levine, Founder of Seed2Stone
A lot of women I talk to are quietly craving something with a little personality in their day to day style. Not a chandelier earring. Not a statement piece that requires a whole outfit. Just something that catches the light differently, and makes you pause for a second when you catch yourself in the mirror.
That's exactly what drew me to color diamonds.
What Gives a Diamond Color?
Most people don't realize that diamonds occur naturally across a wide spectrum — yellow, pink, blue, green, champagne, even black. Color forms when trace elements or subtle structural shifts occur as the stone grows deep underground. Nitrogen creates warm yellow tones. Boron introduces blue. Pressure variations influence pink.
Natural fancy color diamonds are extraordinarily rare — rare enough to be museum pieces. Most color diamonds on the market are treated to replicate these naturally occurring colors.
Color lab grown diamonds are created with heat and element treatments. The result is a stone that is chemically, optically, and physically identical to a mined diamond.

How Each Color Wears
Choosing a color diamond doesn't have to be complicated. Think about how you want to feel wearing it:
The Blue is Electric.
It reminds us of the most perfect blue summer sky. The kind where the blue seems almost unreal, like someone turned the saturation up too high and forgot to bring it back down. On the ear, it gives off the best faded denim energy. Effortless. Cool. The kind of color that feels completely at home whether you are running errands or at a rooftop dinner at 9pm.
And honestly? We love anything denim.
The Deep Raspberry is not just a pretty pink.
It is saturated. Vibrant. It hits like summer watermelon and freshly picked raspberries at the same time. It has the punch of red lipstick without actually being loud. It makes a statement without announcing itself. It is the color that people will ask you about, and when you say lab-grown diamond flat back stud, they will not believe you.
It packs a punch. In the best possible way.
Both are intense colors. Real lab-grown diamonds. The only question is which one is yours.
Start Here:
The easiest entry point is a flat-back stud - one or a pair you can leave on and forget about. Layer a color stone with your existing diamond studs or hoops for an effortless mix. The color does the work; the rest stays simple.
If you're worried it won't feel timeless: your personality always is.








