The wedding band is one of the few pieces of jewellery that you may choose to wear everyday – in the shower, at the gym, at work; so you want it to blend easily with your life.
Hopefully, you will be wearing your wedding ring – a symbol of eternal love – for a very long time.
It helps if you can narrow down your choices.
Do you want the band to match your engagement ring? Would you prefer gemstones or diamonds? Would you like matching bands?
Gold
Gold has always been a popular wedding band choice and is the most traditional option. White gold and platinum have become the most popular contemporary styles. This year has also seen a rise in the popularity of rose gold.
Platinum
It’s durable and therefore more expensive.
Palladium
Palladium is from the same family of metals as platinum, it is just as durable as platinum but less than half the price.
Titanium
Affordable, durable, scratch-resistant and light to wear, it is also a growing trend in wedding bands.
Diamond set rings
A little sparkle adds a touch of glamour but will also add to the price depending on the size of stones, the cut and the carat.
Consider Buying Your Ring and Your Bands Together
* Start Your Search Early – Give yourselves at least two to three months before the wedding date to go ring shopping. You’ll need this time to browse and research prices. Be mindful that any engraving can take up to one month.
*Set a Budget
*Keep Your Lifestyle in Mind
Don’t buy a wedding band that feels uncomfortable or if you have to remove it a lot. You have a bigger chance of losing it.
*Take Your Time Trying
*Wear the same metals together as a harder metal can wear a softer one down over time.
*Beware of getting the right size. Do your final ring fitting at a time when you’re calm and your body temperature is normal. That means you should never finalise first thing in the morning (you retain salt from the night before), right after you’ve exercised (fingers swell) or when you’re extremely hot or cold (which can cause expansion and shrinking of your hands).
Make sure the ring has two marks inside the band: the manufacturer’s trademark (this proves they stand behind their work) and the quality mark, 24K or PLAT, for example (this proves that the metal quality is what the retailer says it is).
If the ring consists of two or more metals, make sure there’s a quality mark for each.
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