Yes you can i have a beautiful 935 Diamond ring selling on wynserve.com
I can't think why not. Whether mixing diamonds with other stones in the same piece or wearing a diamond ring and a ring set with other stones. Just be careful the stones don't rub against each other. Many antique pieces used two or three different stones with diamonds.
the base ring is made and stones are set in in china and the .925 means that it is coated with sterling silver
cubic zirconia stones, .925 silver, made in china
A silver ring is most likely made of silver.
SP means a ring is silver plated
Her ring has several semiprecious and precious stones. Semiprecious stones are not as valuable as precious stones.
Types of material used for jewelry making include gold, silver, platinum, titanium, diamonds, precious and semi-precious stones, engraving, hard anodizing, and even ceramics.
It means that the ring is silver, and the stones are cubic zirconium.
It means that the ring is silver, and the stones are cubic zirconium.
The number is the silver content of the setting.
925 means that the ring is made of sterling silver. The KS is the maker's mark. I've been doing some research about it and found that this mark is from Kirsten Severin a danish silver worker. She worked from 1988-1990 so the ring is considered vintage. Also, if your ring has clear stones I'd get them tested at a jeweler. Chances are that they are real diamonds. I hope this helps!
925 means that the ring is made of sterling silver. The KS is the maker's mark. I've been doing some research about it and found that this mark is from Kirsten Severin a danish silver worker. She worked from 1988-1990 so the ring is considered vintage. Also, if your ring has clear stones I'd get them tested at a jeweler. Chances are that they are real diamonds. I hope this helps!
925 means that the ring is made of sterling silver. The KS is the maker's mark. I've been doing some research about it and found that this mark is from Kirsten Severin a danish silver worker. She worked from 1988-1990 so the ring is considered vintage. Also, if your ring has clear stones I'd get them tested at a jeweler. Chances are that they are real diamonds. I hope this helps!
Generally speaking, jewellery is a precious metal which have been fashioned into an item such as a ring, a brooch, necklace or ear-ring. There may be precious or semi-precious stones inset into the metal. So no - jewellery isn't "a mineral", but it most likely contains some.
First this stone is spelled "sapphire", which is a precious stone. Your ring is not gold if it is stamped 925. 925 is the mark for silver. If your ring is marked 925 and gold in color it is gold plated, which brings no value to the ring besides the value of the silver weight and of course the stones. Unfortunately high quality gemstones are not usually put in a silver setting, unless you are dealing with a high end designer (whose mark would be on the ring). China is the country where your ring was manufactured.
The only hallal jewellry for a man is one finger ring with a stone. Material does not matter. The ring should be made of silver, not of gold or platinum.
It's the "fineness" of gold or silver in the ring, expressed as parts out of 1000. "925" thus means the ring is made of 925/1000 pure precious metal, or 92.5%. If it's made of silver, that percentage is referred to as sterling silver.