No, my friend. You don’t. |
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I have one gold item from Tiffany and it's a bezel-set diamond necklace my parents gave me for Christmas in my 20s. It retails for like $6-700 now.
The rest of my gold is from Bloomingdale's that I get when it's on super sale. Earrings originally for about $1200 that I got for just under $400. Also if you go on Rue La La search for "Real Italian Gold"...it's 18K gold. |
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The only thing I have from Tiffany's came from a boyfriend in my 20s. As it should. I am not wealthy but I do like nice jewelry and I would never buy or ask my husband to buy me something from Tiffany's. For lack of a better word, that store is so incredibly "basic".
I buy jewelry stores (Dominion, Quest) or online. Lately, I've been buying simple gold pieces from Ferkos. My sister buys from China, but she has a friend who is an expat who collects commissions from friends and brings them with her on her trip homes. |
I got some lovely silver Tiffany stacking rings from the RealReal that have a single small inset precious jewel, diamond, ruby, and sapphire in my case. They are from the Elsa Peretti collection and very elegant. |
What is ethnic silver? |
| Silver is not fine jewelry. There's a reason fine jewelry houses like Cartier and VCA don't make anything in silver. You can't argue that something that retails for $50 is considered "fine jewelry." |
FFS people. This is par-for-the-course DCUM ignorance. Y'all don't know what you are talking about and y'all are typing away at the internet anyway. Fine jewelry is defined by the materials. Precious metals -- gold, silver or platinum. And precious gemstones -- diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds. Jewelry made with other materials is costume. Jewelry made with silver is most definitely "fine jewelry." Once you talk about plated jewelry, that is a different matter from sterling silver. But the same thing applies to gold. |
Your ignorance is showing. You don’t know the difference between solid sterling silver and plated metals. |
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Don’t fall into the trap of thinking fine jewelry is inherently a better value. You’ll almost always come out ahead (and have more fun) buying quality costume jewelry and spending the difference on bullion (if you’re actually interested in precious metals) or stock.
If you love the lux stuff for its own sake, go for it. I have a sad taste for Tiffany, myself. But don’t pretend there’s any actual virtue in it. |
This. Their diamonds are hugely overpriced, and a lot of what they sell is just junk. Junk made out of gold, but still junk. |
Why only single out Tiffany? Cartier, VC&A, etc. are all marketed to the same masses. |
New money? |
Yeah, nothing is really handmade anymore, except some of their watches. It's not bad quality but definitely a ridiculous markup . |
Checks out 100%. |
This. And they do in-house grading to avoid GIA. I would never buy a Tiffany diamond. Would you get an extremely poor cut? Probably not. Can you get a much better cut (and therefore a much more beautiful diamond) elsewhere for significantly less? Yes. |