I've been on the hunt for a unique engagement ring for some time now, and have been lurking around here a lot recently which has been of immense help, so thank you countless unknown posters.
My girlfriend is a bit of an eccentric with her jewelry, and has told me repeatedly, long before it was relevant to engagement, that she has no love for faceted gemstones, and certainly not diamonds, which she finds boring. Ignoring the various suspicious comments ("they all say that, but don't mean it") I eventually fell upon the idea of using a purplish star sapphire as the main stone. Crucially I saw a link to James Meyer's work on this site, which has a balance of ornament, organic allusion and old world elegance which is right up my lovely lady's street.
I've spoken to him several times now and he's been very helpful, but now my attention has turned to locating the stone itself. He has had some of his own suggestions, and I may be reviewing them, but living near LA I went to the jewelry district yesterday, and braved/rolled my eyes at some obnoxious hard sells and the like. It was invaluable to see so many star sapphires in such quick succession in person, and it cemented my belief that my girlfriend would love an E-ring with a star sapphire as the main stone.
Amongst the many stones I saw, only the stone whose picture is attached jumped out, but I really loved it (not mentioning the store lest it is thieved from me!). My budget is ~2,000 for the stone and the rest is going to Mr. Meyer to make me a lovely offset setting with an accompanying old mine diamond. The attached stone was quoted at ~2,300, which is obviously slightly out of my budget.
*Note, I stupidly didn't realize the watermark on this picture... I have requested the attachment be removed. Shall not post at 3am in future**
Further to this I have a few questions:
1) Is the price in the majority of LA Jewelery District shops negotiable? Is it normal practice to make a lower initial offer?
2) I know its very difficult without seeing it, and I'm paranoid about giving away too much info before I decide tomorrow to put it on hold, but does this price (2,300) seem in the right ballpark - it seems to based on other gems I've seen, the only thing that would seem to go against it is that it isn't as saturated as it could be (but I actually like some of the grainy auroral appearance).
3) A more general question: The one issue I'm really struggling with is figuring out my girlfriend's ring size. I've been watching her like a hawk in terms of her ring selections recently, but she rarely wears jewelry on her ring finger, and a lot of her jewelry has been passed down from her grandparents, so she's just put it on whatever finger fits, rather than it being fitted, so I'm not sure it is the best guide. Do you have any suggestions on slyly figuring out this measurement accurately? I do have her sister as my secret collaborator, so its possible she can figure it out, but as she lives on the east coast, it would delay things considerably. I'm getting quite excited and impatient at this point to propose, and want this detail resolved. Is it worth me taking the risk of guessing incorrectly here?
My girlfriend is a bit of an eccentric with her jewelry, and has told me repeatedly, long before it was relevant to engagement, that she has no love for faceted gemstones, and certainly not diamonds, which she finds boring. Ignoring the various suspicious comments ("they all say that, but don't mean it") I eventually fell upon the idea of using a purplish star sapphire as the main stone. Crucially I saw a link to James Meyer's work on this site, which has a balance of ornament, organic allusion and old world elegance which is right up my lovely lady's street.
I've spoken to him several times now and he's been very helpful, but now my attention has turned to locating the stone itself. He has had some of his own suggestions, and I may be reviewing them, but living near LA I went to the jewelry district yesterday, and braved/rolled my eyes at some obnoxious hard sells and the like. It was invaluable to see so many star sapphires in such quick succession in person, and it cemented my belief that my girlfriend would love an E-ring with a star sapphire as the main stone.
Amongst the many stones I saw, only the stone whose picture is attached jumped out, but I really loved it (not mentioning the store lest it is thieved from me!). My budget is ~2,000 for the stone and the rest is going to Mr. Meyer to make me a lovely offset setting with an accompanying old mine diamond. The attached stone was quoted at ~2,300, which is obviously slightly out of my budget.
*Note, I stupidly didn't realize the watermark on this picture... I have requested the attachment be removed. Shall not post at 3am in future**
Further to this I have a few questions:
1) Is the price in the majority of LA Jewelery District shops negotiable? Is it normal practice to make a lower initial offer?
2) I know its very difficult without seeing it, and I'm paranoid about giving away too much info before I decide tomorrow to put it on hold, but does this price (2,300) seem in the right ballpark - it seems to based on other gems I've seen, the only thing that would seem to go against it is that it isn't as saturated as it could be (but I actually like some of the grainy auroral appearance).
3) A more general question: The one issue I'm really struggling with is figuring out my girlfriend's ring size. I've been watching her like a hawk in terms of her ring selections recently, but she rarely wears jewelry on her ring finger, and a lot of her jewelry has been passed down from her grandparents, so she's just put it on whatever finger fits, rather than it being fitted, so I'm not sure it is the best guide. Do you have any suggestions on slyly figuring out this measurement accurately? I do have her sister as my secret collaborator, so its possible she can figure it out, but as she lives on the east coast, it would delay things considerably. I'm getting quite excited and impatient at this point to propose, and want this detail resolved. Is it worth me taking the risk of guessing incorrectly here?