Fashion

Aaryah’s BB Thelma Ring Is The Piece You Need to Know About

In 2025, the BB Thelma ring by Aaryah has secured its spot as a defining staple in the modern cool girl’s fine jewelry rotation.

With its dainty, sculptural silhouette, tilted pear-shaped center, and mirror-like diamond or gemstone finish, the BB Thelma offers a tactile, almost meditative presence on the hand. It’s the kind of piece that draws a second glance—and then a question: “Where did you get that?”

An image of Nara smith's hands wearing rings including aaryah's bb thelma pinky rings.

That was exactly what I DMed influencer Rocky Barnes after she posted a far-away photo wearing the ring. Even through an Instagram Story, the BB Thelma shimmered with quiet confidence. It wasn’t flashy. It didn’t beg for attention. It just was. What made it stand out even more? It sat on her pinky finger—a placement that has evolved from an afterthought to a bold, deliberate statement in 2025.

Once a symbol of lineage and legacy—think signet rings worn by older men in the 1900s—the pinky ring has been reclaimed by women as a sign of autonomy and personal style. The BB Thelma captures that shift. “We’ve found that women are buying it for themselves,” says Aaryah founder Megan Kothari. “Traditionally, fine jewelry is something gifted by a partner, for a milestone—but our customers are flipping that. They’re buying BB Thelma rings to celebrate themselves.”

An image of different women wearing aaryah's rings.

But let’s rewind. Before the BB Thelma ring became Aaryah’s signature piece, the brand was born with a mission to honor Kothari’s Indian heritage and the importance of jewelry in it, amplify women’s voices in a male-dominated industry, and reimagine what fine jewelry could mean for a new generation.

Kothari comes from a long line of jewelers—her grandfather and father both worked in the trade—but she didn’t plan to follow in their footsteps. “Growing up, I never wanted to be in this industry,” she says. “It was very male-dominated. There wasn’t really space for women’s voices. So I went into beauty instead, working at L’Oréal and Estée Lauder.”

Aaryah's founder megan wearing a gray suit.

Founder of Aaryah, Megan Kothari

It wasn’t until 2020, during the pandemic, that she began to reconsider. Drawing from years of observation, a diamond grading class at FIT, and plenty of self-teaching, Kothari began working with a jeweler in Manhattan’s Diamond District to bring her vision to life. She then began helping friends design engagement rings, and through that process, she noticed a gap in the market for unconventional and unique engagement ring styles. It pushed her to design her first signature engagement ring, the Trikona—a negative-space triangle ring that quickly found its audience.