
This 6700 DH engagement ring makes brides cry (with joy)
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Khadija had turned down three marriage proposals before Omar's. Not out of a whim, but because no suitor had understood who she really was. When Omar took AZOR's Tagldit ring from his pocket, she knew he'd gotten it.
"This ring is like me," she explains, spinning it around her finger. "It has deep roots but a modern look." That's exactly the spirit of this Tagldit engagement ring .
The name itself carries a legacy. "Tagldit" means "queen" in Tamazight. AZOR didn't choose this name at random. This ring transforms each woman who wears it into the ruler of her own story.
What immediately strikes you are the geometric patterns engraved in 18-carat gold. They evoke traditional Berber tattoos, the designs our grandmothers wore with pride. But here, everything is refined, refined, and adapted to contemporary tastes.
Samira, a jeweler for twenty years in Casablanca, told me that this ring always provokes the same reaction: "Women put it on their finger and refuse to take it off. Even when they just come to look." This magnetic attraction is due to one detail: the ring seems to have been made especially for each hand that wears it.
The price of 6,700 dirhams places this creation in the high-end of engagement rings. But observe the craftsmanship: each motif is hand-carved, each curve respecting ancestral Amazigh aesthetic canons. You're not just buying a ring; you're investing in a heritage.
My cousin Aicha, who has been married for three years and wears her Tagldit ring , still receives compliments on the street. "An elderly woman stopped me yesterday at the market to tell me that my ring reminded her of her mother's," she says, moved. "These jewels build bridges between generations."
What I love about AZOR is its ability to honor the past without mummifying it. The Tagldit ring could be featured in a Berber art museum, but it flourishes on the hand of a 21st-century woman. This successful synthesis of tradition and modernity touches the heart.
Omar told me about his pre-purchase research: "I visited ten different jewelry stores. Everywhere, they offered me the same formatted models. When I discovered the Tagldit, I knew it was her. Khadija deserves a ring as unique as she is."
On the day of their engagement, Khadija's grandmother took her hand to examine the ring. Her eyes welled up. "It fits you like a glove, my daughter. As if it were waiting for you."