Guy seeking advice on engagement ring

My husband picked out a beautiful stone for me from diamondsonweb.com. He paid a lot less for my diamond there than he would have any other place he looked. And the quality ratings are all right there. You could pick out her stone and then get a simple setting to put it in.

They also sell finished jewelry, but I can't vouch for their prices.
 
My DH went to a local family-owned jeweler and told them his budge and what I liked (literally he said "she likes pears and squares. Can you do something like that?"). I'd try a local jeweler. I wouldn't buy a ring sight unseen online.

Best of luck to you and your soon-to-be finacee! :goodvibes

Now start thinking of a proposal that will knock her socks off! ;-)
 
Wow-I didn't expect to get so many replies!! I am halfway done reading them but I wanted to pop in and say thank you-you guys know so much about diamonds!!!

I really didn't know there was so much to factor in with buying an engagement ring. I have never bought her jewelry before (please don't think bad of me!!! she just never really took an interest in owning alot of it).

I decided to back away from Overstock.com-thank you! :)

After more research I realized that it seems much cheaper to do a custom made ring (choose the setting & diamond separately), which I originally figured would be more expensive.

I also didn't realize 1ct was considered "too big." I'm now thinking of 1/2-3/4. She is definitely the type who, once the ring is on, she will not want to take it off (even in the shower or at night).

Can you give me a summary of those codes to look for that explain the clarity and quality of a diamond? I think one was S1 or something. What letters to stay away from?

BTW, I am proposing in WDW during our next trip!!!:goodvibes
 

BTW: Make sure you update us when you buy the ring and the proposal!!! :thumbsup2 Of course after you propose in case she is lurking!!!
 
I1 I2 quality is not good. The quality of I means inclussions- visible to the eye- meaning you would look at the stone and see a black mark or spot someplace on the table of the stone.
I used to work in the business and dh currently is in the business. Quality and clarity of stone are the tricky ones to see online. You have to be familiar with the terminology - SI are better- VSI even better but really not by much so I say if someone is looking to save money be looking at an SI stone NOT I! jmho


I was just suggesting the style, not the actual ring. That being said, the quality of the diamond is not important to everyone, some people really don't care about that kind of thing.

pixiedust: Anyway, I hope you have a great vacation!
 
Just FYI, I wouldn't say that a 1 carat is necessarily "too big" -- that largely depends on where you live, actually. Larger stones are more popular in the Northeast than elsewhere, and it is my understanding that in certain circles in the NYC area something smaller than 1 ct. may now be regarded as paltry. In most parts of the country, though, a 1 ct. would be considered a generous-sized stone, so downsizing from that by a quarter-carat or so would definitely not mean going tiny. Any woman with a solid understanding of what life costs isn't going to feel slighted when being gifted with a half-carat+ diamond.

I'd say that size is not really super-important to most brides in most places, as long as the ring is in proportion. With a solitaire, if the setting overbalances the stone, then it will look tiny no matter how large it is; getting the right setting is key. The style of the cut matters, too -- a shallower cut stone will look larger because it will be wider across the top.

Get your jeweler to let you play with the wax molds once you choose your stone. Good independent jewelers keep wax versions of many, many settings and can have that setting cast in whatever metal you want. Play around with them and try the stone in a bunch of them, since it is wax you can just do it with a tweezers and see the effect immediately. You are looking at a round cut so orientation doesn't really matter, but if you were looking at a shape with a direction, I'd also tell you not to get stuck on the conventional one to use. I have the emerald-cut stone in my ring set transverse, and it looks MUCH better that way than it would have in the usual vertical setting. A good jeweler can usually make minor changes in the style of the setting to give you what you want, whether it's shifting the orientation of a stone, shortening the height of the prongs a bit to give the ring a smoother outer surface, or changing the surface finish of the band (ours are brushed rather than polished.)

One other thing about putting your own ring together. Be leery of any jeweler who tells you that the setting you choose is too valuable re: the price of your stone. If it is YOUR ring, and you can choose to set a stone in any setting they have as long as it will fit securely. The intrinsic value of the metal is irrelevant, and people who harp on it are trying sneaky tactics to goad you into buying a larger stone.
 
Ahhh...A WDW proposal...*swoon*

Anyway, my ring did come from a mall jeweler and was similar to a local jeweler's ring but was a little less. I don't want to totally put you off mall jewelers...dh got a great deal on a beautiful ring and we've gone onto purchase other pieces from the same store and have had beyond excellent customer service, too.
I think around 3/4 is a pretty repesctable size, especially if she has small hands. Good luck! I think the effort you are going through says a lot about you and what she means to you. Good luck!:)
 
When I received my tiny little engagement ring from DH my first words to him were "You can't afford this! It was true. He was broke and we were both starving college students. He borrowed from two friends to buy it, and though he spent more than your budget, it's certainly nowhere near 1 ct. He promised me that someday when we had money he'd get me a bigger stone, but I've never asked him to, and I wouldn't.

Here's a hint for you, it's not the ring, it's the guy. She loves you boy, she'll say yes if you got her a plastic doodad out of one of those quarter machines outside the supermarket. Save your money and take her to Disney.


I think that the young lady needs a nice ring and the trip to Disney can come much later. Not sure where you live , but , consider the diamond exchange in NYC for good prices. I would spend what you have to spend , and save the money some where else. She will have the ring for a lifetime / might pass it down and it's worth the time to learn about diamonds to know what you are buying and get something good for your hard earned money. The diamond should not bankrupt you and do not buy this on the credit card. You'll end up paying lots more for it. Get a second or third job and save up for this purchase. Do not enter into marriage with lots of excessive debt. Good luck and congratulations to you.
 
I'm a gal who likes both quality and a decent size diamond. My ring has no visible flaws and it is 1 1/2 cts. I LOVE it.

My original ring was 1 ct and good quality. I thought that was perfect too.

From my experience with being a woman and having lots of female friends and sisters, the smallest I would go is 3/4 cts but that's just me. I think 1 ct is perfect!

My DH got my new, bigger diamond here: http://www.diamondsonweb.com/

It was a smooth transaction and an amazing ring for a great price! It is GIA certified... full return policy... best prices for certified
(laser inscribed) diamonds. :thumbsup2

Here's a link that explains and shows the clarity levels of diamonds: http://www.diamondsonweb.com/learn/clarity.mhtml

Good luck!
 
not sure where you live, but when my dh was shopping for my ring, he went to a local store called descenzas and talked with them. he told me later that he and his buddy (who went with him to help...he'd already been thru it) went to "diamond school" there, and they taught him what all the terms meant and what to look for, then they let him go thru their loose diamonds to find just the right one. they have a pretty good website that explains things that you might find helpful. http://www.descenza.com/howwesell/index.cfm

mine is under a carat. would I have minded a full carat? nope. but I prefer what he did...under a carat, but with very small inclusions and a good color rating (I think an E, if I remember correctly). my ring really sparkles nicely!

I echo a pp who said if you do get white gold, make sure the setting is in platinum. I don't like yellow gold, either, and my dh ended up choosing platinum for the whole ring and we've had no problems at all. a friend of ours had white gold though and her diamond ended up coming out and she ended up having it changed for platinum prongs since they are stronger.

good luck and have fun! hope you post an uipdate with happy news soon. :)
 
I was just suggesting the style, not the actual ring. That being said, the quality of the diamond is not important to everyone, some people really don't care about that kind of thing.

pixiedust: Anyway, I hope you have a great vacation!

I must know very different people then .If you are spending that much on something it's just common sense to care about the quality. You don't want to get ripped off.
 
We have a great family owned jewelry store in town. Prices are reasonable. I just got my diamond (1ct) reset for our 5 yr anniversary and they worked so well with what we were looking for. They also have a specific setting on solitairs that makes it look bigger than it actually is. My sister has a 3/4 ct stone that looks like 1ct. We've (as a family) bought all our things from them and have never been disappointed. They do free sizing, cleaning, and fixes on their own stuff. Here's their website and let me know if you'd like more info!

http://www.cormiers.com/index.html
 
Please don't laugh at this suggestion, but try a pawn shop too. We have one here in town that sells either used or new rings. We bought one there about six years ago and paid about $800 for it. When it was appraised, it came in at a value of about 2K. It is not an engagement ring, but just a diamond ring. It has four smaller princess cut diamonds in a invisible setting, with smaller stones on the sides. DH is in there quite a bit and the guy was shocked at the value of the ring.

Yes!

I was wondering if someone was going to post about pawn shops. Before y'all get your nose in the air :snooty: and think, well, I don't want to get my fiancee a "used" diamond, the deals you can find in pawn shops are pretty incredible if you know what you're looking for in a diamond, and you can have the stone pulled and reset in a new setting for very little.

The diamond itself is already several billion years old, a few weeks in a pawnshop is not going to affect it.

And besides, it's recycling-nobody else was harmed in Angola, no more mines were created in South Africa for you to buy that diamond.

Back when DH and I were poor students, he bought me a half carat tiffany setting ring from a pawn shop (the setting was new), and later I kept the diamond and we reset it for our 10th wedding anniversary with several other diamonds-I like the idea that my ring evolves like our relationship does, and it's part of our beginning. It's also a Vvsi, G color, diamond-matching more diamonds to it later was a challenge because it is a very good quality stone.

MIL always buys her diamonds at Sams or Costco. You could put an eye out with those sparklers...We are not the type of people who care if it came in a blue box or not, nor do we have any interest in paying for the overhead that many diamond dealers and mall stores tack on.

Know your diamonds, don't be swayed by fancy packaging or salespeople guilting you into 3 months baloney (that campaign was created by DeBeers-the monopoly that controls diamonds!).
 
When I received my tiny little engagement ring from DH my first words to him were "You can't afford this! It was true. He was broke and we were both starving college students. He borrowed from two friends to buy it, and though he spent more than your budget, it's certainly nowhere near 1 ct. He promised me that someday when we had money he'd get me a bigger stone, but I've never asked him to, and I wouldn't.

Here's a hint for you, it's not the ring, it's the guy. She loves you boy, she'll say yes if you got her a plastic doodad out of one of those quarter machines outside the supermarket. Save your money and take her to Disney.
I totally agree with this post. If my boyfriend proposed, it wouldn't matter what kind of stone he gave me (I'd actually prefer something other than a diamond...just not too fond of them) or how big it was. It would matter that he loved me enough to ask me to spend the rest of his life with him.
And I looked at Ebay and found over 78,000 diamond engagement rings but I would be careful about buying online as well.
 
I have no advice, except to say Good Luck to you. We were pretty clueless about jewelry shopping when we got married too. We just don't come from jewelry shopping families.

I have a diamond solitaire in our safe but I'm not the type to never take it off. The exact opposite in fact - I only wear it once or twice a year and then only under duress. The money probably would have been better spent on a Disney vacation. I mostly can't stand to wear anything that has something sticking up high off my fingers.

I also own 4 or 5 different wedding rings, my original ring, a plain gold band, a celtic ring, a platinum band and a couple of others. I change them around depending on my mood. Sometimes I see something I think is pretty and I'll buy another one and DH just sighs and rolls his eyes. He's still wearing his original and I don't think he ever HAS taken his off.

I'm just not very sentimental when it comes to my wedding jewelry. I like my husband just fine though. :laughing:
 
Get the stone first and then work on the setting and yes, get platinum prongs...but even platinum will bend...I have gotten my ring caught on things and totally bent them...be sure to have prong checks at least every year, if not more often. :goodvibes

I had my oval stone set in a six prong platinum setting for security reasons. If one should bend or break it is less likely that the stone would fall out and be lost. I like the looks better, too.
 
I had my oval stone set in a six prong platinum setting for security reasons. If one should bend or break it is less likely that the stone would fall out and be lost. I like the looks better, too.

Mine is in a platinum tension setting because I never take it off and I'm really rough with my hands (rehabbed an entire house, guerilla gardener). It looks really fragile but in fact it's as tough as nails (diamond is the hardest substance known to man and that's a nice chunk of platinum around it)

0081031001007-l4-thumb.jpg


Here are some other tension set diamonds:

engagermentring.jpg


16213.jpg


I'm nervous about the "true" tension set rings that don't have metal under the diamond, I can't believe it wouldn't flex and just pop that sucker right out of the setting, but the tension sets where there's a complete circle of metal under the diamond are *very* sturdy.

This would freak me out:

olympus-abcd-015two1.jpg
 
Go for a ring just under 1 ct. It will cost a lot less and not look that much smaller.

For me, when it came time to get a ring, we bought one from a store that was going out of business for 1/2 price. My simple 3/4 ct ring was $900 w/tax.
 















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