A Closer Look at (What Might Be) Zoë Kravitz’s Engagement Ring
Congratulations may be in order for the couple, with several outlets reporting that the couple are newly engaged—here are all the details we have on the ring so far.

Reported by Vogue.
Harry Styles and Zoë Kravitz touched down in London this week looking perfectly paired—which tracks, given they've been coordinating their aesthetic since linking up last August. But this time, Kravitz had something new catching the light: what appears to be an engagement ring, according to Vogue. Tabloids and several outlets report a source close to the couple has confirmed the engagement, though neither Styles nor Kravitz's representatives have officially weighed in.
The diamond itself is impossible to ignore—a substantial east-west cushion stone set on a slim band, spotted while Kravitz strolled through London (Styles trailing behind with his iced matcha, naturally). While the designer remains unconfirmed, Kravitz's longtime collaborator is jewelry powerhouse Jessica McCormack, who also designed Zendaya's ring. If that's who's behind this one, it slots Kravitz into a very specific moment in engagement ring culture: the east-west pivot.
The Diamond Shift
For years, celebrity engagement rings defaulted to vertical ovals and marquises—think Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez. But 2025 is the year the east-west orientation took over among the modern bride set. Zendaya and Miley Cyrus have both embraced the rotated stone, signaling a subtle but definitive move away from traditional verticals. It's the kind of shift that matters in celebrity jewelry circles—a way of saying: new era, new rules.
Both are heading into a stacked year regardless of ring status. Styles is launching a multi-residency tour to support his album Kiss All The Time, Disco Occasionally, while Kravitz is lined up to star in How to Rob a Bank alongside Nicholas Hoult, Anna Sawai, and Pete Davidson. So whether or not this ring gets an official announcement anytime soon, they're both about to be very, very busy.
The real story here isn't the diamond—it's the timing and the taste it signals.
Read the original at Vogue.


