- Joined
- Nov 7, 2004
- Messages
- 6,632
I would not worry about every day wear with sapphires or rubies. They are corundum, mohs hardness 9 (diamonds are 10). There are only a handful of gemstones, natural materials harder than sapphires and rubies. The only sapphires and rubies I have seen with heavy wear patterns have been on antiques.
What I have learned from the jewelers on here; you may have to worry about wear if: you wear your rings 24/7, never taking them off. That means they get exposed to everything you do, plus the prongs will steadily get worn down from friction from the bedsheets. Take off e-rings at night! 2nd is people who never clean their rings so dirt and grime get really encased in the ring and can damage the stones. 3rd is getting a too delicate setting, like a band that is less than 2 mm, or with very dainty prongs or pave work. That will make it more likely for band to bend or get out of round, prongs loosen and lose stones. I have heard pave rings can be problematic for that.
And then there is a whole set of threads about what are the best metals for a ring!
What I have learned from the jewelers on here; you may have to worry about wear if: you wear your rings 24/7, never taking them off. That means they get exposed to everything you do, plus the prongs will steadily get worn down from friction from the bedsheets. Take off e-rings at night! 2nd is people who never clean their rings so dirt and grime get really encased in the ring and can damage the stones. 3rd is getting a too delicate setting, like a band that is less than 2 mm, or with very dainty prongs or pave work. That will make it more likely for band to bend or get out of round, prongs loosen and lose stones. I have heard pave rings can be problematic for that.
And then there is a whole set of threads about what are the best metals for a ring!