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TUNGSTEN RING STYLES
Domed Tungsten Carbide Rings
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Concaved Men's Wedding Bands
TUNGSTEN WEDDING BANDS
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Carved Tungsten Wedding Bands
Carved Raised Surface Designs
Grooved Tungsten Bands
Sculpted Engagement Bands
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Home >
Men's
Jewelry Articles >
Choosing Wedding Band Style |
CHOOSE
YOUR WEDDING BAND STYLE
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Choose Your Wedding Band Style
Your wedding band should appropriately represent your love and
be an item you can wear with pride. When you embark on your
exciting and emotional purchasing journey, consider wedding
bands that fit your personal taste and budget.
Take time to talk with one another and share your thoughts and
wishes before you start to shop. Do you want matching wedding
bands or do you want a ring that reflects your personal style?
Do you want your wedding bands to match your engagement ring? Do
you have a cultural tradition you want to follow with your
wedding bands? What type of wedding ring would look best on your
hand?
Embrace your culture
When you slip a wedding band onto your new spouse's ring finger
for the first time, you may want it to hold both cultural and
emotional significance. Popular cultural traditions include:
Irish Claddagh rings: The heart in a claddagh ring symbolizes
love, while the crown denotes eternity and the clasped hands
mean friendship.
Jewish wedding bands: The traditional Jewish wedding band is a
plain, unbroken gold circle that represents a pure and eternal
union.
Russian wedding rings: Russian wedding rings have three
interlocking bands that represent the Holy Trinity. Each band
may be a different shade of gold: rose gold, white gold, or
yellow gold.
Traditional wedding bands: Early Egyptians thought wedding bands
created a never-ending circle of love that carried over to the
afterlife. The tradition of wearing a band on the third finger
started with the ancient Greeks, who thought a vein linked that
finger directly to the heart. Later, around the time of Pope
Nicolas I, it came to mean a legal and binding agreement as
well. Today’s traditional Western wedding bands stem from both
ancient Egyptian and Greek beliefs, representing a spiritual (or
religious) and legal commitment between two people.
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