Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Wedding Rings

Fortunately, I still have my wedding ring, my husband is on his 4th. He lost the first one, the first week we were married. He was sick and very thin, so much so, that his ring slid off his finger while moving our items from the house we rented (which had a fire while we were on our honeymoon) into our new temporary place. Suffice it to say, our first week of marriage was truly unique. That was 40 plus years ago and thankfully we continue to have a strong marriage. All of that is to introduce the topic of purchasing wedding rings. I found this post interesting and insightful, perhaps some of you will glean something from it for your characters.

Buying Wedding Rings.
A SHY YOUNG man went into a Broadway jeweler's store, so says a local reporter, and looked at gentlemen's rings, fingering them and asking questions about them, and yet appearing to take only a forced interest in them. The jeweler's clerk whispered
to a bystander, "By-and-by he will come around to the wedding or engagement rings. That is what he has come after." Sure enough the young man presently pointed to a tray of flat gold band rings. "What are they for?" he inquired. The clerk said that they were merely fancy rings, worn by ladies and gentlemen, and that some folks bought them for wedding rings. The shy young man tried two or three on his little finger, and, finding one that would not quite go over his knuckle, said, "Give me this one. How much is it?"
"It's five dollars," said the clerk, " but if you want a wedding ring I would advise you not to buy it. Every now and then we sell them to people who insist upon having them, but as soon as they find out the fashion they come back and have them melted up and rolled up into this old-fashioned round form. The only wedding ring is the round ring, plain and simple."
"Gimme a round one, then; same size as this."
He got one and went away. The clerk laughed, and said he could tell when a young man wanted a wedding or engagement ring every time; though sometimes they ask to be shown clocks, bracelets, or anything rather than what they come for. Very many come right to the point, though they stammer and falter about it quite painfully. Others again ask frankly and boldly to see what they want. "There never has been a change in the fashion of wedding rings," said the clerk; "the plain round gold ring has always been the only correct thing. Men sometimes choose other kinds, but women never make that mistake."
"Do women choose their own wedding rings?"
"Oh, very often. Frequently they come in alone, fit a ring to the right finger and leave it for the prospective bridegroom to pay for. Sometimes they pay for it and take it away, and of course the young man reimburses them. Quite often, too, the brides come in with their mothers. Very serious and grave the mothers are, and show neither timidity nor sentiment. They ask for wedding rings, they look them over, buy one, and go away. Irish and German girls often bring their lovers as well as their mothers. There is not a funnier sight in the world than to see a clumsy fellow hanging behind and looking unutterably foolish while his sweetheart and her mother discuss the purchase. They pay no attention to him until they come to the final selection. Then they tell him how much is to be paid, and he pays it and they all go out. Irishmen are apt to be close buyers. They will scarcely ever buy anything without knocking something off the price, but no Irishman ever haggles over a wedding or engagement ring. It does not matter if the wedding ring he chooses comes as high as nine dollars. He pays the price without a murmur."
"Many foreigners, particularly Germans, exchange wedding rings. The bride pays for the groom's ring and vice versa. At the altar they exchange rings. They come in together to buy them."
"What is the fashion in engagement rings?"
"Oh, there is no fashion in them particularly. Any pretty ring set with small stones does for the purpose. Turquoises and pearls are popular just now, and so are pearls by themselves. Diamonds are the rage with people who can afford them, and from that the precious stones range downward in price to amethysts. Engagement rings cost from $15 to $150; wedding rings from $5 to $15. Very many persons have initials, dates or mottoes engraved in their wedding rings. 'Mizpah,' or ' Thine forever ' are favorites, but the commonest custom is to have merely the initials and date—' J. S. to S. J., Nov. 11, 1883,'—cut in the inner surface of the ring. Nothing is engraved in engagement rings. The manner of wearing them has changed, however. They used to be worn on the index finger of the left hand, you know, but the ladies think that a little too much of an advertisement nowadays, and they wear them on the third finger of the right hand. That finger of the left hand is still the one on which wedding rings are worn."
Source: The Jeweler's Circular and Horological Review ©1884

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