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Wedding Etiquette Forum

Family ring/second engagement ring question

Hey guys,
I don't know if this is really etiquette related or not but I admire your insight and honestly so I'm going to throw this out there.  I got engaged last November not long after my grandmother passed away.  My mom had a ring that was her mother's (my grandmother who passed away), that she wore for a long time as her engagement ring until my dad bought her a new ring as a 20th anniversary gift that she has worn ever since.  Long story short, it was her hope that that ring would become mine.  My FI knew about this diamond, but when he seriously started planning out proposing and talking to my parents, my grandmother had recently become very very ill and we knew she was dying.  He felt very uncomfortable asking for the ring at that time (didn't want to come off as, "I know your mother is dying, but hey can I have her jewelry?").  It would not have been taken that way but he is very mindful of that sort of thing and didn't want to in any way upset my mom, so instead he got a different ring.  In November he proposed with the new ring, which is absolutely beautiful and I love.  A couple of months ago, my mom suggested me taking her mother's ring and having it reset somehow so I could have a part of her with me throughout the whole wedding journey, as she really would have loved to be here.  We ended up getting it reset as a right hand ring, but my mom and I went to pick it up today and I got very emotional.  It is something that both my grandmother and mother wore as an engagement ring and it just hit me hard how much I miss her and how much I wish she could be there at my wedding this year.  I went home and as I was talking to FI about it and missing her, he got down and reproposed with my grandmother's ring, explained about really wanting me to have it but not wanting to take it from my mom, etc.  It was very very very sweet and selfless of him and he wants me to wear this on my left hand and wear the other ring he gave me on my right hand.  My mom was very touched by this, as am I.  I know it will mean a lot to my grandfather as well.  

Now here's the thing...people are obviously going to notice the new ring and notice my other ring on my right hand.  If people ask, what do I say?  My grandmother's ring is larger than the original engagement ring and I don't want people to think the original one "wasn't good enough" for me because that's not the case...the other ring was perfect in every way.  Honestly, even if my grandmother's ring has been a diamond chip set in a ring, it would mean the same to me.  I get that sometimes you just have to let it go and let people think what they want, but in you opinion, if people ask, what do I say?

Sorry for the long post!  Thank you all! 

Re: Family ring/second engagement ring question

  • love it exactly what I was looking for thanks @lemclane
  • You're welcome!
    Anniversary

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    I'm gonna go with 'not my circus, not my monkeys.'
  • Just tell them the truth.
  • I think it's totally fine- how wonderful to have such a great family, and such a great guy!  Congratulations!
  • Lovely story! And I'm so sorry to hear about your grandmother because mine died on my sixteenth birthday. Um.. About your ring problem.. I don't think it will be that much of an issue. I mean I have my O'Connor clan ring - which is significantly larger then a 7.5 - on my right hand. In my opinion, not many people notice the rings on the right hand as much as the left.
  • Kida07 said:
    Lovely story! And I'm so sorry to hear about your grandmother because mine died on my sixteenth birthday. Um.. About your ring problem.. I don't think it will be that much of an issue. I mean I have my O'Connor clan ring - which is significantly larger then a 7.5 - on my right hand. In my opinion, not many people notice the rings on the right hand as much as the left.
    Thank you for the input (and very cool about the clan ring!).  I should have clarified, I meant the diamond size is much bigger...I didn't want people to think I was trying to "trade up" for a larger diamond than my FI originally gave me 
  • That's a wonderful story about your ring...I'd just respond, "This is a family heirloom that became available to FI after his original proposal-it meant a lot to both of us to carry on the family tradition."
  • Just tell them a short version. There's nothing shady or weird about it. 
  • Just tell them a short version. There's nothing shady or weird about it. 
    Yup.
  • It's a beautiful story, share it with as many people as you can.  If they notice the switch, that's an awesome opener.
    Don't make me mobilize OffensiveKitten

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    Anniversary

  • I wear two engagement rings and wear the heirloom on (my great gmas, it is also smaller than mine) on my right hand. Honestly, when I wore just the right hand ring (before we were engaged) people would ask all the time if I was engaged. Now that I have both, people don't ask much. If they do, a brief explanation that my right hand ring was my great gmas isn't too bad.

    I think your rings will look and feel great since they both have so much meaning (connecting past and future, for instance)
    I guess, to tell you the truth, I've never had much of a desire to grow facial hair. I think I've managed to play quarterback just fine without a mustache. - Peyton
  • WeeshWeesh member
    250 Love Its Third Anniversary 100 Comments Name Dropper
    What a beautiful ring!  I agree with the other posters--you have a beautiful story and an incredibly thoughtful man. 
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  • It is stunning!  I agree with PP, just tell them the truth.
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  • That is a beautiful story, and i'm happy you have a ring you love so much.  Have you considered having the ring your FI got you reset as perhaps a solitaire pendant (or a prive pendant, depending on what it looks like)?  That's probably what i would do...I prefer right hand rings to not look like engagement rings - but that is of course my personal opinion, and everyone is different.  Wearing the new diamond as a necklace would also make it more prominent than a right-hand ring, in my opinion.  Just an idea!

     

    The last time i was at my mom's house she gave me a beautiful right-hand ring that belonged to my great-grandmother that i had no idea she owned - it's too big for her scrawny fingers so she never wore it.  Fortunately, i have the family's "normal" fatty fingers, and it fit me perfectly.  it's an aquamarine with a few small diamonds around it set in silver - and it will be my something old and something blue on my wedding day.  Mom suggested it could also be something borrowed, but i'm not planning to give it back, so that doesn't really count. ;-)

  • It's actually not that bad. My claddagh ring on my right hand middle finger is about the same size. It's just wider that's all. However your ring is beautiful! I love it!
  • I love your ring. Consider yourself double lucky.
  • I love your ring. Consider yourself double lucky.
    I consider myself beyond lucky...I have an amazing family, and amazing man, and marrying into an amazing family.  And thank you : ) 
  • It's beautiful!

    My ring is also mostly heirloom. My grandma gave me her engagement ring early (her comment, not mine: "I'd rather see it on your finger as you get ready to marry that lovely young fella, sweetheart, than for you to have to wait for me to die! I can't see it anymore anyways!") The center stone was from grandpa's mother's ring. However, the setting was 50+ years old, and did not fit my finger. We ended up having to have all three diamonds reset. It's the same pattern as grandma's, but FI added his own touches to the setting style, and made it unique to me.

    One thing to consider- perhaps your previous engagement ring could be used or remade into your wedding band? After grandpa passed, grandma took a diamond ring of his and had a lovely little necklace made for herself. She couldn't wear the ring as it was, and there weren't any grandsons to give it to, so she had the stones reset into something she could wear. There are plenty of options for your non-heirloom ring! Or perhaps you'll save it, and pass the heirloom to a daughter, the non-heirloom to a son? Possibilities are endless!

  • @Chipmuck415 your grandma sounds wonderful!  and I love this idea...I thought about it but I don't know if there's any real way to rework this ring into a band...this is the style of my nonheriloom ring 


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    Only the diamonds are not that true chocolate color, they are this champagne color seen here


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    Its quite intricate and really lovely, I would consider taking stones out of the band or maybe the bezel rim but I don't know if there is anything they could do to it to make the rest of it still wearable...I might need to go to a jeweler and just see what the options might be 
  • Bubbles2014Bubbles2014 member
    100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited July 2013

    @Chipmuck415 your grandma sounds wonderful!  and I love this idea...I thought about it but I don't know if there's any real way to rework this ring into a band...this is the style of my nonheriloom ring 


    image
    Only the diamonds are not that true chocolate color, they are this champagne color seen here


    image
    Its quite intricate and really lovely, I would consider taking stones out of the band or maybe the bezel rim but I don't know if there is anything they could do to it to make the rest of it still wearable...I might need to go to a jeweler and just see what the options might be 
    You could have the smaller diamonds taken out and reset in rose gold as a wedding ring. Then the bigger diamond, any remaining smaller diamonds, and the metal could become a pendent. See a jeweler and ask what your options are, but I'd say it'd be very doable.

    ETA - typo

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