- Joined
- Mar 19, 2021
Here’s my uninvited Ring Shopping Tip:Wedding favor time.
It's a plastic piece of crap.
Thank you open bar
Thoughts on this?
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This is from the same shop, lol
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I highly recommend going to a jewelry store to try things on if you aren’t someone who wears rings or jewelry often. You might be surprised by what you like and don’t like on your hand. I really liked the idea of a halo ring, pave band, or a pear shaped diamond before I went in, and trying them on really changed what I liked and didn’t. I found out pretty quickly that too much sparkle didn’t feel like “me.”
Also, don’t feel obligated to by from the jewelry store afterwards. But if you feel bad wasting a salesperson’s time, you could also buy a cheap cubic zirconia ring or two on Amazon to see if you like the shape and size on your hand (and maybe return it afterward if you want).
I personally like diamonds and was interested in getting a diamond engagement ring and holy shit the diamonds at jewelry stores are retarded expensive for what you get. I got really into diamond grading for a time and learning all about diamonds, and the store I went to had diamonds that sucked on some level. For example, one ring included a 1ct diamond with good color (I think it was a D?), but you could see inclusions looking at it without a loupe (it was an I2). And the whole ring cost $10,000. For reference, you can get a diamond with the same color and fewer inclusions for $2,500 at Rare Carat. So fiancé and I ended up getting the ring on rare carat, which is pretty good except for their cringy ads.
Also, I’m pretty sure that if you buy a diamond ring from a website, most of the websites share a pool of diamonds. I don’t know if this is common knowledge or not. But basically, when you go to James Allen (for example) and build a diamond ring, you can look through different diamonds and pick one you want. Then you could go to Brilliant Earth or another site and build a diamond ring, and the same diamond will be there down to the same inclusions, grading, etc. Literally the same diamond, the only difference is the price, and it will cost way more at one site than another for no reason I can tell. Unsure if this is true for lab-grown diamonds.
Also, I’m pretty sure that if you buy a diamond ring from a website, most of the websites share a pool of diamonds. I don’t know if this is common knowledge or not. But basically, when you go to James Allen (for example) and build a diamond ring, you can look through different diamonds and pick one you want. Then you could go to Brilliant Earth or another site and build a diamond ring, and the same diamond will be there down to the same inclusions, grading, etc. Literally the same diamond, the only difference is the price, and it will cost way more at one site than another for no reason I can tell. Unsure if this is true for lab-grown diamonds.