Last updated: April 2026
You have probably experienced this at least once: you tried on a piece of jewelry that looked breathtaking on someone else — and on you, something was just off. The gold felt too harsh. The silver washed you out. The rose gold that looked effortlessly elegant on your friend made your hand look oddly pink. You left the store empty-handed, vaguely frustrated, and wondering if you simply do not have the complexion for that metal.
Here is the truth that transforms how you shop for jewelry forever: it was not the wrong metal. It was the wrong metal for your undertone. And once you understand undertone — a concept that takes five minutes to grasp and one simple test to confirm — every jewelry decision you make for the rest of your life becomes dramatically easier.
This guide will walk you through everything: the science of undertone, three reliable methods to identify yours, which metals and gemstones complement each undertone category, why the "rules" are really guidelines, and how the modern mixing metals trend beautifully dismantles them. By the end, you will shop with a confidence that no amount of Pinterest browsing can replicate.
Understanding Skin Undertone: The Foundation of Every Jewelry Choice
Your skin has two color dimensions that work simultaneously. The first is your surface tone — how light or dark your skin is. Surface tone changes with sun exposure, seasons, and age.
The second dimension is your undertone, and this is the one that matters for jewelry. Undertone is the subtle, persistent hue beneath your skin's surface. It does not change with a tan or a sunburn. It is genetically determined and stays constant throughout your life. Think of it as the tint of the canvas underneath your skin's visible paint.
There are three undertone categories:
- Warm undertones — Your skin has a golden, peachy, or yellowish base. Veins often appear green or olive-toned. You tend to tan easily and look best in earth tones.
- Cool undertones — Your skin has a pink, red, or bluish base. Veins typically appear blue or purple. You may burn before you tan and look best in jewel tones.
- Neutral undertones — Your skin balances warm and cool without leaning strongly in either direction. Veins may appear teal or blue-green.
A critical point that trips people up: undertone is completely independent of how light or dark your skin is. A person with very fair skin can have warm undertones. A person with very deep skin can have cool undertones. Advice like "gold looks best on darker skin" is not just oversimplified — it is wrong. It is always about the undertone, never about the depth.
Why Undertone Matters for Metal Choice
When metal jewelry sits against your skin, two colors interact. The metal's color temperature either harmonizes with your undertone or clashes with it. When they harmonize, both your skin and the jewelry appear to glow — the metal looks richer, and your complexion looks healthier and more luminous. When they clash, both suffer. The metal can look cheap or dull, and your skin can appear sallow, ashy, or flushed.
This is not mysticism. It is basic color theory — the same principles interior designers use when choosing palettes and cinematographers use when lighting a scene. Complementary color temperatures enhance each other. Conflicting color temperatures diminish each other.
Three Reliable Methods to Determine Your Undertone
Forget internet quizzes that produce contradictory results. These three physical tests, performed in natural daylight, give you a definitive answer in minutes. Do all three — if two out of three point the same direction, that is your answer.
Test 1: The Vein Test
Turn your wrist over and examine the veins on the inside of your forearm near a window with natural light. Artificial lighting distorts the colors — daylight is the only honest referee.
- Green veins — Warm undertones. The yellow in your skin combines with the blue of your veins to create a green appearance.
- Blue or purple veins — Cool undertones. The pink or blue in your skin lets the veins' natural blue show through clearly.
- A mix of both, or teal-colored veins — Neutral undertones.
The vein test works for about 80% of people but has limitations for very deep skin (veins may not be visible enough) or very fair skin (too many visible veins to assess a dominant hue). Confirm with the next two tests.
Test 2: The Draping Test (The Most Accurate Method)
This is the technique professional color analysts use. You need two pieces of fabric — one pure white and one off-white or cream — and a mirror in natural daylight. Remove all makeup and jewelry.
Hold the pure white fabric next to your face. Then swap to the off-white or cream. Pay attention to what each does to your skin — one will make your face look clearer and more radiant; the other will make it look slightly tired or uneven.
- Cream or off-white flatters you more — Warm undertones.
- Pure bright white flatters you more — Cool undertones.
- Both look equally good — Neutral undertones.
Extend this test with silver and gold fabric held against your face. The one that makes your skin glow directly previews how silver and gold jewelry will interact with your complexion.
Test 3: The Jewelry Test
If you own both gold-toned and silver-toned jewelry — even fashion jewelry works — put one on each hand or hold one against each side of your neck. One will blend with your skin as though it belongs there. The other will sit on top like a foreign object.
- Gold jewelry enhances you — Warm undertones.
- Silver jewelry enhances you — Cool undertones.
- Both enhance you — Neutral undertones.
The key question is not "which do I prefer?" but "which makes my skin look better?" You might prefer gold aesthetically but find that silver makes your complexion healthier. Trust the skin response, not the preference.
When Tests Disagree
If your results are mixed, you are likely neutral — or very close to the warm-cool borderline. Roughly 30% of people sit close enough to the center that they could credibly claim either category. If that describes you, congratulations: you have the widest range of metal options available.
Best Metals for Warm Undertones: Gold and Rose Gold Territory
If your tests consistently pointed warm, you are in the golden zone — literally. Metals with warm hues amplify the natural warmth in your skin, creating a cohesive, luminous look.
Yellow Gold: Your Natural Match
Yellow gold is the classic choice for warm undertones, and the match is nearly foolproof across every karat and skin depth. Higher karat gold — 18K versus 14K — has a deeper, more saturated yellow that looks even better on warm skin. But 14K gold still carries enough warmth to complement beautifully, especially in everyday pieces where durability matters.
Yellow gold is particularly stunning on warm undertones in necklaces (a gold chain against warm skin creates a glow no other metal replicates), rings (gold on warm-toned hands looks as though it grew there), and bracelets (gold against the inner wrist, where skin is thinnest and undertone most visible, is one of the most flattering combinations in jewelry).
Rose Gold: The Warm-Undertone Secret Weapon
The copper content in rose gold gives it a pinkish-golden blush that sits beautifully against skin with yellow or peachy undertones. The warmth of the gold base harmonizes with your skin, while the copper adds a blushing dimension that creates depth.
On warm undertones, rose gold often looks more "expensive" than it actually is. The metal and skin enhance each other so effectively that even a simple rose gold band can look luxurious. Rose gold is especially flattering in earrings (framing the face with soft warmth), engagement rings (they photograph exceptionally well on warm-toned hands), and layering pieces (rose gold mixes seamlessly with yellow gold for a curated warm-toned stack).
Metals Warm Undertones Should Approach with Caution
Bright silver metals — sterling silver, unplated white gold, and certain platinum finishes — can create cool-versus-warm tension against warm skin. The silver emphasizes the yellow in your skin by contrast, which can make the complexion appear sallow. Rhodium-plated white gold mitigates this because the mirror-like plating reflects light rather than imposing its own temperature.
Notice: "approach with caution," not "avoid." A warm-toned person wearing a stunning platinum or white gold diamond ring will still look beautiful — the diamond commands attention, and the setting recedes. The caution applies most to large, stone-free silver metal surfaces worn directly against skin.
Best Metals for Cool Undertones: Silver, White Gold, and Platinum Territory
Cool undertones find their natural partners in metals that share their blue, pink, or neutral-white color temperature.
Sterling Silver and White Gold
Sterling silver is the most accessible precious metal for cool undertones — the bright, white-silver finish echoes the cool base in your complexion, making both appear cleaner. It performs especially well in statement pieces and earrings, where proximity to the face means the color harmony directly affects how your complexion reads.
White gold offers the prestige and durability of gold with a cool color profile. The rhodium plating produces a bright, slightly blue-white finish that is exceptionally flattering on cool skin. Over 6–18 months of daily wear, the plating wears thin and the underlying yellow alloy begins showing through. Re-plating costs $30–$60 at most jewelers and restores the cool finish instantly.
Platinum: The Premium Cool Metal
Platinum is naturally white — no rhodium plating needed. For cool undertones, this makes platinum the ultimate match: the color harmony is inherent and never fades. The premium over white gold is significant (typically 40–100% more), but for cool-toned individuals who want a permanent cool-metal finish, the value proposition is compelling. See our detailed platinum versus white gold comparison.
Metals Cool Undertones Should Approach with Caution
Strongly warm metals — especially high-karat yellow gold — can emphasize any pink or red in cool-toned skin, sometimes making it appear flushed. Rose gold is interesting here: the pink component can actually complement cool skin with pink undertones. A cool-toned person with notably pink undertones may find rose gold surprisingly flattering.
Neutral Undertones: The Entire Jewelry Case Is Your Playground
If your tests pointed neutral, every metal flatters you. Yellow gold, white gold, rose gold, platinum, sterling silver — all create at least a passing harmony because your skin does not lean strongly enough to create a clash. But "everything works" is not particularly helpful when choosing, so let us be more specific.
Lean into contrast. Because no metal clashes, choose based on the visual story you want. Yellow gold creates warmth and a sun-kissed glow. Silver metals create crispness and a contemporary edge. Rose gold adds romance and softness.
Build a mixed-metal wardrobe. Anchor your everyday pieces — your go-to earrings, your daily necklace, your signature ring — in whichever metal you personally prefer, then collect accent pieces across other metals.
Honor the lean. Most neutral-toned individuals lean slightly warm or cool. If you have noticed over the years that you reach for gold more often, or that silver always feels slightly more polished, trust that instinct. It is your slight lean expressing itself through years of unconscious testing.
Gemstone Colors by Skin Tone: The Complete Matching Guide
Metal is only half the equation. Gemstones interact with your skin tone just as powerfully, and the combination of metal plus stone plus skin creates a three-way color relationship.
Best Gemstones for Warm Undertones
Warm undertones are enhanced by gemstones in the warm spectrum — colors containing yellow, orange, or red undertones:
- Citrine — Golden yellow citrine in yellow gold against warm skin is one of the most naturally harmonious combinations in jewelry.
- Garnet — Deep red garnet brings regal warmth that complements golden and peachy undertones.
- Peridot — The yellow-green bridges warm skin and warm metal with a fresh, earthy dimension.
- Amber and golden topaz — These mirror the warmth in your skin, creating a monochromatic golden effect.
- Ruby — Set in yellow gold, a ruby on warm skin is the definition of opulence.
- Warm-toned sapphires — Yellow, orange, and padparadscha sapphires are extraordinary against warm skin.
Best Gemstones for Cool Undertones
Cool undertones harmonize with gemstones in the cool spectrum — blues, purples, cool pinks, and icy whites:
- Blue sapphire — Set in white gold or platinum, a blue sapphire against cool skin creates aristocratic elegance.
- Tanzanite — The violet-blue is exceptionally flattering on cool-toned skin.
- Amethyst — Purple amethyst in a silver-toned setting is a cool-on-cool pairing that looks regal.
- Aquamarine — The icy blue enhances cool undertones with freshness and clarity.
- Diamond — Colorless diamonds are the ultimate neutral-to-cool gemstone, which is why the diamond solitaire in white gold or platinum is the enduring standard for cool-toned engagement rings.
Best Gemstones for Neutral Undertones
Neutral undertones are particularly well-served by stones at the warm-cool boundary: emerald (contains both warm yellow and cool blue), tourmaline (available in virtually every color), opal (its play of color spans warm and cool simultaneously), and morganite (enough warmth for warm-leaning neutrals and enough pink for cool-leaning ones).
The Setting-Stone-Skin Triangle
The most intentional jewelry choices consider all three elements together. A warm-toned person choosing a cool-toned gemstone (say, a blue sapphire) can bridge the gap by setting it in yellow gold — the warm metal provides skin harmony while the cool stone adds contrast. A cool-toned person drawn to citrine can set it in white gold or platinum to maintain cool-metal-skin harmony while the warm stone provides a focal point. Match two of three elements to your undertone and let the third provide deliberate contrast.
The "Rules Are Meant to Be Broken" Section
Now that we have established color-theory guidelines, let us be equally honest about their limitations.
Contrast can be a feature, not a flaw. When a warm metal creates visual tension against cool skin, that tension draws the eye. If you want your jewelry to stand out rather than blend in, choosing the "wrong" metal achieves exactly that. A single gold cuff on a cool-toned wrist becomes a focal point precisely because it does not disappear into the skin.
Personal style overrides color theory every time. If you love yellow gold — if it makes you feel powerful, connected to your heritage, aligned with your aesthetic — then yellow gold is the right choice regardless of what your veins say. Jewelry is worn for emotional reasons as much as aesthetic ones.
Context changes everything. A gold necklace that might create mild tension against bare cool-toned skin may look perfectly harmonious over a cream blouse or tan blazer. Clothing acts as a bridge between metal and skin, and the right outfit can make any metal work with any undertone.
Cultural and Personal Significance
In many cultures, specific metals carry meaning that supersedes aesthetic preference. Yellow gold is deeply significant in South Asian, Middle Eastern, East Asian, and African jewelry traditions. Suggesting that someone with cool undertones should avoid gold would be culturally tone-deaf — gold in these contexts is heritage, wealth preservation, and family tradition materialized in metal.
Similarly, inherited jewelry transcends color theory. A grandmother's yellow gold ring on a cool-toned hand is not a fashion mistake — it is memory made tangible. If the metal happens to clash with your undertone, wear it as a pendant against clothing, combine it with pieces in your complementary metal to dilute the visual impact, or have the piece re-set in a different metal if the stone is the meaningful element.
The only genuine rule: if you put it on and it makes you feel more like yourself, it is the right piece. Undertone guidelines help you navigate choice when you feel overwhelmed. They are not a restriction on what you are allowed to wear.
The Mixing Metals Trend: Why It Works and How to Do It Well
For decades, the rule was absolute: do not mix gold and silver. That era is definitively over. Mixed metals are now one of the most prominent trends in fine jewelry. Here is how to execute it well.
The Rule of Dominance. The most successful mixed-metal looks have a dominant metal and an accent metal. Choose the metal that best complements your undertone as the dominant one — the larger pieces, the pieces closest to your face. Introduce the contrasting metal in smaller doses: a stacked ring, a thin chain in the layered necklace arrangement, or a bracelet in the alternating stack.
Bridging with Rose Gold. Rose gold is the great mediator between yellow gold and silver. Because it contains both warm and cool elements, placing a rose gold piece between a gold piece and a silver piece creates a gradient that looks intentional and curated rather than accidental.
Deliberate Repetition. The difference between "mixed metals that look styled" and "mixed metals that look accidental" is repetition. If you introduce silver into a primarily gold look, make sure it appears in at least two places. A single silver ring among four gold ones looks like you forgot. Two silver rings among three gold ones looks like a deliberate choice.
The Hardware Rule. Your jewelry metals should acknowledge your accessory hardware. If your watch, belt buckle, and bag all have silver hardware, including silver-toned jewelry ties the entire outfit together. The goal is not perfect matching but a sense that all the metallic elements are in conversation.
Seasonal Color Theory and Jewelry: A Deeper Framework
The "seasonal color analysis" system — Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter — subdivides undertone into four categories that account for both temperature and contrast level, offering more granular jewelry guidance.
Spring (Warm + Light): Golden or peachy skin, often with freckles. Best metals: light yellow gold (10K and 14K), light rose gold. Best stones: peridot, light citrine, coral, turquoise. Spring types are flattered by jewelry that feels fresh and bright rather than heavy.
Summer (Cool + Muted): Pink or rosy skin with a soft quality. Best metals: white gold, platinum, soft silver, muted rose gold. Best stones: lavender amethyst, rose quartz, aquamarine, soft pink sapphire. Summer types are flattered by jewelry that feels gentle and refined.
Autumn (Warm + Deep): Golden-olive or bronze skin. Best metals: rich yellow gold (14K and 18K), deep rose gold, antiqued and brushed gold finishes. Best stones: garnet, amber, smoky quartz, carnelian, deep citrine. Autumn types are flattered by jewelry that feels substantial and earthy.
Winter (Cool + Deep): Very fair or very deep skin with cool undertones and high contrast. Best metals: bright platinum, polished white gold, high-polish silver. Best stones: deep blue sapphire, emerald, ruby, onyx, high-clarity diamonds. Winter types are flattered by jewelry that is bold and striking.
The seasonal system is most useful for narrowing within a metal family. Once you know you are warm, the model helps you decide which warm metals work best — a Spring type gravitates toward lighter gold; an Autumn type toward richer gold. Same undertone, different intensity.
Using the Seasonal System Practically
If you have never been professionally color-analyzed, the simplest shortcut is to notice which intensity level flatters you. Do you look best in bright, light colors or deep, rich ones? Combine that observation with your warm-cool result: bright plus warm equals Spring, deep plus warm equals Autumn, bright plus cool equals Summer, deep plus cool equals Winter. This gives you a working seasonal category that will sharpen your jewelry choices beyond the basic three-category model.
For jewelry specifically, the seasonal system helps you choose finishes as well as metals. Spring and Summer types tend to look best in polished, high-shine finishes that keep things light and luminous. Autumn and Winter types often excel with a wider range — brushed gold, matte finishes, and antiqued textures add the visual weight that deeper seasonal palettes can support.
How Jewelry Photographs: Why Metals Look Different on Screen
In an era when jewelry is purchased online and worn in photographs as much as in person, understanding how metals render on camera is a practical skill.
The Camera Shifts Colors
Most smartphone cameras have a slight warm bias in auto white balance, making silver metals look slightly warmer and gold metals more intensely golden than in person. When shopping online at Bijolina, our product photography uses professional white balance calibration for accuracy. If a piece looks slightly different in a customer's Instagram photo than in the product listing, the listing is almost certainly closer to the true color.
Lighting Changes Everything
The same ring looks completely different across lighting conditions:
- Natural daylight — The truest representation of both metal color and skin tone. The honest mirror.
- Warm indoor lighting — Yellow and rose gold look warmer. Silver and platinum pick up warm reflections. Most flattering for warm metals.
- Cool artificial lighting — Silver metals look crisp and bright. Gold can appear slightly muted. Most flattering for cool metals.
The practical takeaway: if you work under fluorescent office lights all day, cool metals will look their best in your daily environment. If your evenings are spent in warm restaurant lighting, warm metals will shine in those moments.
Photographing Your Jewelry at Its Best
Gold and rose gold photograph best in golden-hour lighting (the hour before sunset) — the ambient warmth amplifies the metal's color and creates that sought-after glow on both jewelry and skin. Silver, white gold, and platinum photograph best in bright, slightly overcast daylight. All metals benefit from indirect light rather than direct flash, which creates harsh reflections that obscure detail. If you are purchasing jewelry partly for how it will appear in wedding or engagement photos, mention this to your photographer — a good one adjusts white balance to complement the jewelry you are wearing.
Skin Tone Plus Outfit Coordination: The Complete Picture
Jewelry sits at the intersection of your skin, your clothing, and the ambient light. Understanding how to coordinate all three elevates the entire equation.
Warm Undertones: Outfit and Jewelry Pairings
- Earth-toned outfits + yellow gold — Camel, olive, terracotta, chocolate, and cream create a warm canvas that makes gold jewelry look inherently luxurious. The warm-undertone power combination.
- Black outfits + yellow gold or rose gold — Gold against black on warm skin creates striking contrast. Rose gold against black is softer and more romantic.
- White outfits + gold — Classic, timeless, always photographs well. Choose ivory or cream whites for the most cohesive warm palette.
- Warm jewel tones + gold — Ruby red, burnt orange, mustard, and forest green pair beautifully with gold on warm skin.
Cool Undertones: Outfit and Jewelry Pairings
- Cool jewel tones + silver or white gold — Sapphire blue, emerald green, plum, and cool pink with silver-toned jewelry create sophisticated harmony.
- Black outfits + silver, platinum, or white gold — Cool skin in black with silver metals reads as sleek, modern, and powerful.
- Gray outfits + platinum or white gold — Monochromatic cool elegance at its purest. Add a diamond or sapphire for the only sparkle you need.
- Pure white outfits + silver metals — Bright, true white with platinum or silver on cool skin creates a clean, luminous look.
Neutral Undertones: The Outfit Advantage
Neutral-toned individuals can let the outfit dictate the metal: gold and rose gold for warm-toned outfits, silver and platinum for cool-toned outfits, whichever suits your mood for neutrals and blacks. This ability to pivot metals with each outfit change — and look equally harmonious every time — is the neutral-undertone superpower.
The Neckline-Metal Interaction
One overlooked detail: neckline shape determines how much skin the necklace sits against. A high neckline means the necklace sits primarily against fabric, reducing skin-metal interaction to nearly zero — choose the metal purely for outfit coordination. A plunging neckline means maximum skin contact, making undertone harmony more important. The same logic applies to bracelets (long sleeves versus bare arms) and earrings (hair up versus hair down changes how much skin is visible around the earring).
Engagement Rings and Lifetime Pieces
The skin-tone conversation carries additional weight when the jewelry is meant to last a lifetime. A trend piece can break the rules freely because you will rotate it out in a season. An engagement ring or wedding band is different — you will wear it for decades, across thousands of outfits, in every lighting condition. For these pieces, we recommend giving slightly more weight to undertone compatibility than you might for fashion jewelry. A metal that consistently flatters your skin means the ring always looks right rather than occasionally fighting your complexion. That said, engagement rings are deeply personal, and a colorless diamond looks stunning in any metal on any skin tone — the brilliance of the stone transcends metal-skin dynamics. For a complete walkthrough, see our beginner's guide to fine jewelry.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can I wear gold jewelry if I have cool undertones?
Absolutely. Lower-karat gold (10K and 14K) has a more muted warmth that clashes less with cool skin than saturated 18K. You can also mitigate tension by wearing gold with cool-toned gemstones or alongside cool-toned clothing. Many cool-undertoned people wear gold beautifully by integrating it thoughtfully rather than fighting their skin's temperature.
2. Does skin tone or undertone change with age?
Your surface tone can change — skin may become lighter or develop different pigmentation patterns. However, your undertone remains constant throughout life. It is genetically determined and does not shift with age, tanning, or other surface changes. A piece that flatters your undertone at twenty-five will still flatter it at seventy-five.
3. What metal should I choose if my undertone test results are inconclusive?
You almost certainly have neutral undertones, meaning every metal works. Try pieces in person at a jeweler in natural light. You will likely gravitate toward one metal, and that subtle preference is your answer. At Bijolina, our product photos are color-calibrated, but nothing replaces the in-person test for borderline cases.
4. Is rose gold warm or cool?
Rose gold is technically warm — made from yellow gold alloyed with copper. However, the pink hue can complement cool undertones with pink or rosy bases. It sits closer to the warm-cool boundary than either yellow gold or silver, which is why it is widely regarded as the most universally flattering metal. If you are unsure about your undertone, rose gold is the safest starting point.
5. Does skin depth (fair, medium, deep) affect which metal I should choose?
Skin depth affects visual contrast between metal and skin but does not determine which metal flatters you — that is entirely about undertone. A fair-skinned person with warm undertones and a deep-skinned person with warm undertones will both be flattered by gold. The gold looks different against each depth, but both interactions will be harmonious because the undertone match is correct.
6. How do I choose jewelry metals for a gift when I do not know the recipient's undertone?
Three safe strategies: choose rose gold (flatters the widest range of undertones), choose a piece where the gemstone dominates and the metal setting is minimal, or observe what metals the recipient already wears — people unconsciously gravitate toward metals that complement their skin.
7. Can I mix gold and silver jewelry in the same outfit?
Yes, and it is one of the most current trends in fine jewelry. The keys: repetition (include each metal in at least two pieces), dominance (let one metal be primary), and bridging (use rose gold between gold and silver to create a gradient). Mixed metals work on all undertones, though most seamlessly on neutral.
8. Why does the same ring look different on me than it does in product photos?
Three factors: professional photography uses calibrated lighting that may not match your environment, your skin's undertone interacts with the metal differently than a white backdrop, and screen calibration varies between devices. Identify your undertone first so you can mentally adjust for how the metal will read against your specific skin.
9. Does the undertone rule apply to earrings, or only to jewelry worn against the body?
Earrings are actually where undertone matters most. They frame the face — where people focus attention and where skin color is most visible. A metal that clashes with your undertone will be most noticeable near your face. If you prioritize undertone matching anywhere, prioritize it in earrings and necklaces.
10. What if I simply prefer a metal that does not match my undertone?
Wear it. Jewelry is personal expression first and color theory second. The undertone framework helps when you are unsure — it is not a prescription. Your confidence in wearing a piece you love communicates more powerfully than whether the color temperature is technically optimized. The best jewelry is the jewelry you reach for every morning because it makes you feel like yourself. If you are exploring fine jewelry for the first time, our beginner's guide walks through the full decision-making framework.
Explore the Full Bijolina Collection
At Bijolina, we curate jewelry across every metal family because the right piece is the one that makes you feel extraordinary — whether it follows the color-theory playbook or rewrites it entirely. Whatever your undertone, whatever your style, we have something that will make your skin glow and your confidence soar.
- Shop Gold Jewelry — Yellow gold, white gold, and rose gold across every category
- Shop Rings — From solitaires to stackable bands in every metal
- Shop Earrings — Studs, hoops, and drops that frame your face beautifully
- Shop Necklaces — Chains, pendants, and layering pieces for every neckline
- Shop Bracelets — Bangles, tennis bracelets, and chain styles for every wrist
- Browse All Collections
Use code WELCOME10 at checkout for 10% off your first purchase. Every order includes free shipping, a 14-day return window, and our lifetime warranty on all fine jewelry.
Not sure which metal is right for a specific piece? Our jewelry consultants are here to help — reach out anytime and we will match you to the perfect metal for your skin, your style, and your story.