There are two jewellery trends that have developed over the last 10-15 years, between England and America (I moved) which are bothering me. First is the price of settings, and second is the price of semi-precious stones.
I wrote about this on another thread, but it was a bit of a threadjack so I removed it and am posting it as a separate topic. I also wrote about the settings issue on PS a few weeks ago, but didn't get many responses.
The price of settings in America is absolutely eye-watering, in my opinion. I've never been in a country where settings are so through the roof in terms of price. My ring was Hearts on Fire and it was a plain basket solitaire, a few hundred dollars in 2005 I think, and I can't see what the ring would have gained by having setting costing $1500 for plain metal. In England the settings are equally beautiful, I have much jewellery from there including very nice intricate pave settings with sparkly melee, and they were only a few hundred pounds. My personal opinion is that these designer settings like Mege and Kirsch (which can run to many thousands of dollars) are a racket and the jewellers must be laughing all the way to the bank! That's where they have their serious mark-up, on the settings, not so much the diamonds.
I suppose it's also about trends in jewellery. Time was, the setting was a minor part of the price, but now settings are jewellery items in their own right. But I'm amazed that no one else is squeaking about this except me. I feel like a lone voice in the wilderness. The crux of the matter? These settings are so, so much more than other jewellery pieces of similar materials value and level of workmanship. American consumers have a reputation for demanding value for money. That's why it suprises me that so many people seem OK with paying prices for settings that do not represent fair value. I just don't see how a pair of plain leverback settings in 18k can cost a thousand dollars - no stones, just the settings. For plain leverbacks. I got a half-carat princess G-colour 14k eternity ring which sparkles like crazy from a reputable Boston jeweller for the same price. I've also seen the same leverback setting elsewhere for $250. I guess I just don't understand why no one seems to be questioning the price of settings when it seems so outrageous to me.
I also don't understand the price premium for "handmade" settings. If it's handmade, isn't it more likely to be wonky?
I also don't like the trend for homemade jewellery. I've received about five items of homemade jewellery as gifts (costume, not real) and every single one has fallen apart after a few outings. So much for handmade! (Only joking - I know it's not the same thing as handmade by a proper jeweller. The homemade thing just occurred to me as a related topic.)
Also, speaking of trends, 15 years ago semi-precious gems like citrine and topaz were inexpensive as they are not rare, but now various top-end designers sell semi-precious stones at precious prices, and people buy them. I'm talking about people like Kiki McDonough, the London jeweller who sells her things to the Royal Family. Diana and Fergie wore her designs, now Kate Middleton and her sister wear them. www.kiki.co.uk Blue topaz/white topaz should never cost this much - it is a plentiful stone.
So my questions are:
1) Why are settings so expensive, even the plain metal ones?
2) Why do semi-precious stones now often sell at precious prices?
c) Why do we put up with it?
I'm British! I'm not supposed to be the one banging on the table demanding better value - I'm supposed to be taking tea and talking in measured tones! I'm doing your job for you here, Americans!
I am actually off to have a cup of tea now - no joke. The proper type, hot with milk!!
I wrote about this on another thread, but it was a bit of a threadjack so I removed it and am posting it as a separate topic. I also wrote about the settings issue on PS a few weeks ago, but didn't get many responses.
The price of settings in America is absolutely eye-watering, in my opinion. I've never been in a country where settings are so through the roof in terms of price. My ring was Hearts on Fire and it was a plain basket solitaire, a few hundred dollars in 2005 I think, and I can't see what the ring would have gained by having setting costing $1500 for plain metal. In England the settings are equally beautiful, I have much jewellery from there including very nice intricate pave settings with sparkly melee, and they were only a few hundred pounds. My personal opinion is that these designer settings like Mege and Kirsch (which can run to many thousands of dollars) are a racket and the jewellers must be laughing all the way to the bank! That's where they have their serious mark-up, on the settings, not so much the diamonds.
I suppose it's also about trends in jewellery. Time was, the setting was a minor part of the price, but now settings are jewellery items in their own right. But I'm amazed that no one else is squeaking about this except me. I feel like a lone voice in the wilderness. The crux of the matter? These settings are so, so much more than other jewellery pieces of similar materials value and level of workmanship. American consumers have a reputation for demanding value for money. That's why it suprises me that so many people seem OK with paying prices for settings that do not represent fair value. I just don't see how a pair of plain leverback settings in 18k can cost a thousand dollars - no stones, just the settings. For plain leverbacks. I got a half-carat princess G-colour 14k eternity ring which sparkles like crazy from a reputable Boston jeweller for the same price. I've also seen the same leverback setting elsewhere for $250. I guess I just don't understand why no one seems to be questioning the price of settings when it seems so outrageous to me.
I also don't understand the price premium for "handmade" settings. If it's handmade, isn't it more likely to be wonky?
I also don't like the trend for homemade jewellery. I've received about five items of homemade jewellery as gifts (costume, not real) and every single one has fallen apart after a few outings. So much for handmade! (Only joking - I know it's not the same thing as handmade by a proper jeweller. The homemade thing just occurred to me as a related topic.)
Also, speaking of trends, 15 years ago semi-precious gems like citrine and topaz were inexpensive as they are not rare, but now various top-end designers sell semi-precious stones at precious prices, and people buy them. I'm talking about people like Kiki McDonough, the London jeweller who sells her things to the Royal Family. Diana and Fergie wore her designs, now Kate Middleton and her sister wear them. www.kiki.co.uk Blue topaz/white topaz should never cost this much - it is a plentiful stone.
So my questions are:
1) Why are settings so expensive, even the plain metal ones?
2) Why do semi-precious stones now often sell at precious prices?
c) Why do we put up with it?
I'm British! I'm not supposed to be the one banging on the table demanding better value - I'm supposed to be taking tea and talking in measured tones! I'm doing your job for you here, Americans!
I am actually off to have a cup of tea now - no joke. The proper type, hot with milk!!