Anonymous wrote:Guy here, I went half with my now wife. I also didn't feel right making a large financial purchase in the 10s of thousands without consulting her, especially something she would wearing on her hand for the rest of her life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this, 1925? Both a man and woman should pay equally (we did).
You bought half of your own ring? Gross.
Do you not do joint finances? By the time it came time for engagement ring shopping, we definitely saw our finances as tied together.
No way would I pay for half my ring and I make way more than my fiance. I would be fine with a smaller ring and definetly wouldn't want him financing a ring because our finacnes would be joint. But, sorry, there is something still to be said for the man paying for the ring entirely.
"...but I demand equal rights for everything else."
Anonymous wrote:If you want bling, get a CZ ring. No one will be able to tell the difference looking at your hand.
. You don't need an engagement ring and I preferred to spend the cash on travel and a down payment on a house. But to each their own.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this, 1925? Both a man and woman should pay equally (we did).
You bought half of your own ring? Gross.
Do you not do joint finances? By the time it came time for engagement ring shopping, we definitely saw our finances as tied together.
No way would I pay for half my ring and I make way more than my fiance. I would be fine with a smaller ring and definetly wouldn't want him financing a ring because our finacnes would be joint. But, sorry, there is something still to be said for the man paying for the ring entirely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this, 1925? Both a man and woman should pay equally (we did).
OP here. This is interesting. If you are the woman, you knew when he was proposing? (Alternatively, if you are the man, your now wife knew you were proposing?) I'm just curious as to how that works. You split the ring half and half, but how/when is it given?
Honey, like you, my husband and I had a child before we got married. Yes, we went half/half on the ring because I knew exactly what I wanted. PLEASE stop acting as if the proposal is mysterious. You are already a family. You are having a conversation about getting married. There is no secret here, no suspense. Figure out what you want (e.g. stone, cut, metal) and start pricing.
I got the 16-stone ring from Tiffany's. It has increased in priced substantially. I think I got it for around six grand. We got our wedding bands from Cartier. I liked a beautiful, simple gold piece they had for $400. Yes, at Cartier. I bought the tri-color ring for him, and it came to around $1,000.
I did recon ahead of a shared visit. We each slapped down a credit card and left happy. Done. I think we went to Clyde's to celebrate (which makes me smile).
You have a child together, love. The proposal is over, and you already accepted. The ring and the ceremony are a punctuation mark to what you've already established----not a start point.
Thanks for sharing.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this, 1925? Both a man and woman should pay equally (we did).
OP here. This is interesting. If you are the woman, you knew when he was proposing? (Alternatively, if you are the man, your now wife knew you were proposing?) I'm just curious as to how that works. You split the ring half and half, but how/when is it given?
Anonymous wrote:sad that in america people spend more on their cars than on their marriage