Anonymous wrote:I was married in 2000 and my engagement ring and wedding band are 18k yellow gold. Friends who married after me all chose platinum or white gold. Now I’m starting to see yellow gold again. Wear what you like. Trends come and go.
Anonymous wrote:Kind of like how one PP mentioned that a decade ago her small ruby and yellow gold ring wasn’t necessarily cool, I think there is a stereotype of gen X women with platinum engagement rings with large diamonds who were traditionally “cool” or trendy a decade ago. It looks dated now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't like my yellow gold rings from the 80s. At the time, I thought I liked them better. What was I thinking?
Platinum was so big when I got engaged in 1996. I used to wear a lot if silver and white gold with my platinum engagement/wedding bands.
Gold is really in now. I have a lot of gold pieces and I really didn’t like it back in the 90s/early 2000s.
My mom has a wonderful thick/wide gold wedding band. It’s wonderful.
All classes do both if that’s what you are getting at, OP.
There is a guido connotation about men and gold chains and women with huge gold earrings.
OP here - this is kind of what I was getting at. Platinum seemed so dominant with folks in the 90s and 2000s whereas yellow gold seems more vintage
Anonymous wrote:I’m unaware of any stereotype about this.
Not a stereotype but - growing up in Vancouver there were many recent East Asian immigrants who wore a lot of very yellow gold that l was told was close to 24k. Like they were wearing their wealth. I’ve heard pure gold is very soft it’s better to use up to 18k for making jewelry.
Personally l prefer yellow gold because as others have said, it looks nice with my skin tone.
Anonymous wrote:This is weird.
Most people wear yellow gold if they look better in warmer colors and white gold / silver if they look better in cooler colors.
Anonymous wrote:Yes there definitely are stereotypes.
Yellow gold is perceived as cheap and flashy. Don't always agree with it, but that is a known stereotype.