AndyRosse
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2004
- Messages
- 4,363
Well, so maybe they just got what they wanted then ?Date: 11/18/2004 4:55:34 PM
Author: StatiK76
95% of the people that are anti-tiffany are generally wives that never recieved a Tiffany ring
woah baby! sounds like you''ve got a bee in your bonnet.Date: 11/18/2004 4:55:34 PM
Author: StatiK76
Mara,
You sure can dance around a handfull of questions!
regardless. I found myself in a similar situation as what your husband probably found himself in when he decided to propose. Do I spend ''too much'' at Tiffany & Co, or do I buy budget-conciously and use any additional money to assist in saving for a home. In regard to the $5k I was referring to in my previos post .. I was referring to an aprox 5k cost difference between a Tiffany & Co e-ring vs. a non-Tiffany ring. I just figured that this was an important enough thing to not to allow an aproximate $5000 difference sway my decision. Really, $5000 will not be making a difference on when, or how i purchase our future home. Which is why your comment on using the extra money to buy a home surprised me .. Maybe the ring he purchased would have cost $20,000 more at Tiffany - i don''t know .. That would maybe legitimize your reasoning.
I recognized that my girlfriend would die for a Tiffany & Co. ring - She jokes, and plays around with the idea .. But is no more serious than when I joke around and ask for a Monster Truck for christmas! So, I spent a month or so cruising the forums, reading anything and everything that had to do with Tiffany & Co. I spotted an interesting pattern in the threads discussing T&C rings. 95% of the people that are anti-tiffany are generally wives that never recieved a Tiffany ring. I wonder whether they would feel so passionately against the ''blue box'', if they had been the one who had recieved it ... (yourself included). I sincerely do not believe that any girl (in her right mind, or not) would refuse a ring due to potential cost or its packaging.
Despite the many protests, drippingly jealous comments, slanderous remarks, and ''blue box'' cost theories ..
I decided - Some girls are worth the extra cash .. and some aren''t. The ones that aren''t, can sit on the pricescope forums, and jealously bash the branded ring they never recieved untill they are ''robin egg blue'' in the face.
So I dumped 20k(cdn) on 1c IF/F from Tiffany.
And by the way - i''m posting this on Thursday. Get over it (and the rest of your Tiffany issues).
Whew! Such animosity!Date: 11/18/2004 4:55:34 PM
Author: StatiK76
Mara,
Despite the many protests, drippingly jealous comments, slanderous remarks, and ''blue box'' cost theories ..
I decided - Some girls are worth the extra cash .. and some aren''t. The ones that aren''t, can sit on the pricescope forums, and jealously bash the branded ring they never recieved untill they are ''robin egg blue'' in the face.
Oh it''s Friday! And I''ll have at it.
I know enough about diamonds to know that buying a diamond at Tiffany most of the time only gets you that image of nouveau riche everyone is clamoring to have,
Yeah, I gotta agree. When Tiffany stores start popping up everywhere and every gal and her mother has a Tiffany pendant, then the prestige is long gone.Date: 11/19/2004 9:580 AM![]()
Author: fire&ice
this above................and Tiffany & Co. is sooooooooo Middle America.
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Date: 11/19/2004 1:52:33 PM
Author: Mara
''Suggesting someone has paid ''too much'' for a diamond from Tiffany is a little ironic don''t you think considering the item purchased is not even rare? ''
Since you are paying for an item that isn''t rare, what exactly ARE you paying for then if you shop at Tiffany?
As a diamond freak I want to pay for quality of stone, not the packing it comes in or the ''prestige'' of the name to my friends. I want to know that my stone is a knock-your-socks-off-top-5% and it feels good to know too that I paid what it was worth in terms of what the jeweler bought it for and what they sold it to me for. Just as I wouldn''t pay a 40% markup at a Tiffany, I won''t pay it at a jeweler either.
''I take more offense to the suggestion that I or others have paid for a blue box .. when in reality every single diamond owner has paid a ridiculous cost for .. ''
Some have paid a much less ''ridiculous'' cost than others...![]()
''If this site is truly about budget .. you are all fools.''
Fools with more money left in pocket after a diamond purchase? I would venture to say yes.![]()
I am a wife. I went to Tiffany''s. They had beautiful rings. I tried on a 1 carat....beautiful...it was $13,995! No problem says husband. Whatever you want says he. I ended up with a non-branded ring weighing 3.0ctw. Yes. It was more money than the Tiff 1 carat....but.. my point is, many of the women here on ps are already married and many of them are on an upgrade diamond. Now, since WE "the wives" are choosing this diamond, we have the option of going to Tiffany''s NO. The fact that we choose not to make our ring purchase at Tiffany''s does not make us anti-tiff. It just says that we wanted something else!style="WIDTH: 99%; HEIGHT: 85px">
Date: 11/18/2004 4:55:34 PM
Author: StatiK76
95% of the people that are anti-tiffany are generally wives that never recieved a Tiffany ring
Date: 11/20/2004 11:59:31 AM
Author: JJ2004
Diamonds are as valuable as pebbles in a beach. It''s driven by an artificial supply and demand. So, as a lot have said, the diamond game is just a question of how duped you want to be.
ForteKitty,Date: 11/19/2004 11:45:29 AM
Author: ForteKitty
You know, i was shocked to find that all of my brother''s friends have Tiffany jewelry from their boyfriends.... and they''re only 15-16!!Where do these kids get their money from?!? (and how they can spend it like that is completely unfathomable.)![]()
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Yes, the ring, in total, will have a quicker (perhaps higher) resale value. Take the diamond out to sell as a loose stone - no difference in selling a diamond w/ similar specs. If one chooses to sell just the setting - it will retain more value than a non branded setting.Date: 11/20/2004 12:12:29 PM
Author: widget
I may have missed it in this looooong thread, but has anyone compared the relative resale/depreciation values of a Tiffany ring and it''s generic equivalent?
widget
Date: 11/21/2004 9:30:19 AM
Author: fire&ice
Yes, the ring, in total, will have a quicker (perhaps higher) resale value. Take the diamond out to sell as a loose stone - no difference in selling a diamond w/ similar specs. If one chooses to sell just the setting - it will retain more value than a non branded setting.Date: 11/20/2004 12:12:29 PM
Author: widget
I may have missed it in this looooong thread, but has anyone compared the relative resale/depreciation values of a Tiffany ring and it's generic equivalent?
widget