Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might not be able to get a decent 1.5 carat stone in a solitaire setting for 8k (although you can come close) but you can definitely do it for 9k through Ritani or some of the other online sources. Don't ever shop at a local jeweler, they'll just try to fool you by saying "doesn't this one look shiny!" The certificate is all that matters... is it VS1, VS2, etc., is it H color or D color? My advice is that the naked eye can't tell an H from a D unless they are side by side, and there is almost never a reason to get higher clarity than VS2. Obey these principles and you can make your fiance happy for 9k or less, guaranteed.
Cathedral setting with pave band: $890
https://www.brilliantearth.com/Sonora-Diamond-Ring-White-Gold-BE110-1152702/
Matching pave wedding band: $890:
https://www.brilliantearth.com/Ballad-Diamond-Ring-(1/6-ct.-tw.)-White-Gold-BE2D1823/
1.3c I color VS2 princess ideal cut diamond: $5550
https://www.brilliantearth.com/loose-diamonds/view_detail/9878048/
Total $7330
Or, skip the side stones and you can get to 1.5c. But PP is correct that you save money and lose no appearance in going just under the .5 and whole carat benchmarks.
BUT: This is where an honest conversation with your girlfriend is the answer. It isn't hard to game the diamond industry, it's kind of a scam anyway. And I'm a woman with a beautiful ring I love. But as someone approaching 50 with a man I also love, boy does stuff like this pale in comparison to our kids, our future goals, how we feel around each other. We talked one day and he said one of the things he loved best about me was my "financial restraint", lol. And I understand. Men feel enormous pressure and guilt by our dumb society to show their love with these trinkets. Show your love by showing up for her, literally and metaphorically, every day (or most days). If you both value that, you'll make it. The ring is just window dressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see why he gets to be the one to decide the budget and size. She has to wear it for the next 50 years.
Well, 50% chance she will only wear it for ten years or less, so he’d be a damn fool to spend too much money on it.
Also, his money, so he decides the budget.
No. Once they marry money is joint. So if he wastes his money on a tiny ring, that’s his fault
$5-8k on a diamond ring is "tiny"??
Anonymous wrote:Why not just save up more or take out a loan? If it’s that important to her.
I told my SO the ring I wanted cost $14000, because it did. He figured it out. I make a good salary and can afford more than that and he knows that, is meeting me where I’m at.
Nothing wrong with that and I like what I like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see why he gets to be the one to decide the budget and size. She has to wear it for the next 50 years.
Well, 50% chance she will only wear it for ten years or less, so he’d be a damn fool to spend too much money on it.
Also, his money, so he decides the budget.
No. Once they marry money is joint. So if he wastes his money on a tiny ring, that’s his fault
Anonymous wrote:For people saying she needs to contribute to the ring.
Most people combine finances after they get married. So one way or another she is contributing. If he spends 5k extra now on the ring, that is 5k that won't go to a house down payment or a vacation or whatever later on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see why he gets to be the one to decide the budget and size. She has to wear it for the next 50 years.
Well, 50% chance she will only wear it for ten years or less, so he’d be a damn fool to spend too much money on it.
Also, his money, so he decides the budget.
No. Once they marry money is joint. So if he wastes his money on a tiny ring, that’s his fault
Anonymous wrote:For people saying she needs to contribute to the ring.
Most people combine finances after they get married. So one way or another she is contributing. If he spends 5k extra now on the ring, that is 5k that won't go to a house down payment or a vacation or whatever later on.
Anonymous wrote:For people saying she needs to contribute to the ring.
Most people combine finances after they get married. So one way or another she is contributing. If he spends 5k extra now on the ring, that is 5k that won't go to a house down payment or a vacation or whatever later on.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see why he gets to be the one to decide the budget and size. She has to wear it for the next 50 years.
Well, 50% chance she will only wear it for ten years or less, so he’d be a damn fool to spend too much money on it.
Also, his money, so he decides the budget.