You donât have to be into luxury watches to wear a watch. To be the kind of man who knows what âescapementâ means, or why Rolexes with faulty dials are more covetable than the pristine ones. Thatâs because even though watches are jewellery, theyâre not really jewellery. Theyâre functional. You could use one to land a stricken plane. You could navigate through a jungle. You could even summon a rescue plane, if you ever find yourself stranded with Breitlingâs Emergency on your wrist.
Whereas decorative jewellery gives a fella funny feelings. A man whoâll lay down his inheritance on a Patek Philippe will still balk at a necklace, or even worse, a ring. Buying something just for the way it looks is pure vanity. Itâs something women do.
Itâs also something Viking warriors, Egyptian kings and Tudor nobles did. That rappers still do. It wasnât until the Victorians, and their priggish efforts to separate the sexes, that men eschewed jewellery. Sir Walter Raleigh wore a ruby-studded ring that would put Mr T to shame.
Fortunately, men are finally starting to see sense. âI initially started designing for the guy who just wore a watch,â says Michael Saiger, who founded menâs sjewellery brand Miansai a decade ago, and whoâs done more than most to normalise the idea that anyone can rock a ring. âI donât think guys are nervous about rings that arenât wedding rings; I more feel that some guys are hesitant about wearing jewellery in general because they have a hard time accessorising. Guys should be more open to taking risks and trying new things with their everyday style.â
It helps that designer brands have followed suit and now offer craft rings for men â often at accessible price points â that wonât make you look like a tangential member of the A$AP Mob. âTheyâre completely acceptable as a way to accessorise an outfit,â says Henry Graham, creative director at Wolf & Badger, a marketplace for independent retailers. That said, itâs easy to go overboard, so there are a few things to bear in mind before you weigh down your entire hand in precious metals.
But firstâ¦
Which Ring For Which Finger?
Where your ring ends up should be steered by taste, practicality and mechanics (just because a ring goes on, thatâs no guarantee itâll come back off as easily). âTradition may state differently, but I believe you should wear any ring how you wish,â says Alice Walsh, director of accessories label Alice Made This. âYour ring, your hand, your choice.â But if youâre a stickler â or just need a steer â there are some connotations for different ring fingers.
Pinky
The first stop for guys who want to think beyond the wedding ring. Your pinky has a few advantages when you want to dip a (little) toe into menâs jewellery. First, itâs on a finger thatâs essentially decorative, so it wonât get in the way of actually doing things with your hands. Second, it doesnât have an underlying meaning; you wear a ring there because you want to, not because of tradition.
The Godfather popularised the idea that gangsters wear pinky rings, but unless you spend your nights at the docks, youâre probably safe from that misapprehension. More likely theyâll think youâre inspired by Prince Charles, who wears his signet ring on his left pinky â stacked on top of his wedding ring, as is royal tradition.
Ring Finger
The clueâs in the name. This is where the most common menâs ring goes â a wedding band. In the UK and US, youâll most often find it on the left hand; in Eastern Europe and Orthodox traditions, it can appear on the left. As ever, go with whatever feels comfortable â if youâre a lefty, you might find it sits better on your right hand, where itâs less likely to get in the way of anything.
The ring fingerâs been the home to wedding bands for centuries, supposedly based on the idea that itâs the only finger with an unbroken vein â the vena amoris â that leads directly to the heart. As romantic an idea as this is, itâs also cobblers â the veins in your hand are all basically the same.
Middle Finger
For rings, the middle finger tends to be the last port of call when the rest of your hand is full. Itâs not left bare for traditional reasons, but rather because itâs so close to your index finger, which tends to be most active. That proximity means anything with any heft can feel awkward, but because your middle finger is the handâs biggest, too dainty a ring looks odd. Which leaves you in no manâs land.
For those guys who do wear middle finger rings, they tend to appear on the opposite side to the wedding band. Again, thatâs a practical thing â stack rings up on consecutive fingers and youâll sound like a castanet player whenever you move your fingers.
Index Finger
Historically, the most prominent finger was home to the most prominent rings: a signet or family crest, worn by nobility and, in some cultures, banned as a ring location to anyone outside the aristocracy.
These days, you can put a ring on it even if you donât have a family crest, but youâd still be wise to go big, since itâs a space that makes a statement. If youâve got the cojones then chunky, three-dimensional rings look good on an index finger.
Thumb Ring
Think of the thumb as the index finger on steroids. For one, your thumb is big and so needs a big ring. Thereâs also the fact that thumb rings are less common, which means youâve got a statement ring in a novel location.
But that all also means that, if youâre the kind of guy who leans into statement-making, a thumb ring is an easy way to stand out. To avoid looking like you own an âimport-exportâ business, keep the rest of your hand fairly clear; a pinky plus a thumb ring gives a decent amount of separation.
5 Style Tips For Wearing Rings style guide
1. Be Ambidextrous
Like any accessory, less is often more with rings. Overload your hands and the individual elements become tricky to discern. âYou should balance your jewellery,â says Walsh. âIf you have a wedding band and watch on one hand, then one or two rings would work nicely on the other hand, for example.â
David Yurman
2. Nail Your Scales
As with your clothes, fit matters. Tiny rings on pianist fingers can feel out of place, much as skinny jeans can look indecent on bodybuuilder thighs. âThe scale of jewellery is important to bear in mind,â says Graham. âDonât wear rings that are the wrong size for your body shape. A big ring can look good on a guy with large hands but uncomfortable if you have small fingers.â
Rachel Boston
3. Match Your Metals (Or Donât)
Traditionally, clashing metals signified a lack of care â all your jewellery should be either gold, or silver, but never both. But in a world where you can wear joggers with a blazer, pairing a steel watch with a gold ring isnât the faux pas it once was. Although itâs still best when you make it look deliberate.
âWhen done right it can add a more stylised aesthetic to the overall look,â says Saiger. Itâs particularly effective when you mix your metals in a single piece; wear something like Miansaiâs Fusion ring and youâve got carte blanche to add more rings in either metal. âWe were able to take 90 per cent silver and 10 per cent gold and use this process of mechanically bonding it together through a machine to achieve this look.â As well as your style, itâs also good for your pocket.
Holt Renfrew
4. Think About Your Lifestyle
Rappers can rock the dripping-in-bling look because they donât have to wear suits to work. âIf you do, then a giant, statement ring wonât work,â says Graham. âLook for something more subtle.â You can always leave the 3D stuff for the weekend, but if you want to make rings a signature, go for a simpler form of personality.
âChoose something thatâs timeless, but nothing overly designed or intricate, unless itâs a piece you see yourself wearing everyday,â says Saiger. âRings are something that I find people like to put on and never take off, so for this reason I would suggest going with something more understated.â
Smith Grey
5. Commit
Any style statement looks best when you own it. âWhen a man wears jewellery he doesnât feel comfortable in, that shows,â says Saiger. Rings can feel odd at first, a physical weight that makes you more self-conscious. So try before you buy and only go for something you feel confident you can pull off. And if that means starting out with something thatâs barely there, so be it. âPersonally, I like my rings at two millimetres, which is the same as my wedding band,â says Saiger.
David Yurman
Three Go-To Ring Styles
Wedding Band
Though common today, until the Second World War, only wives wore wedding bands. This was less about romance, more the patriarchy; it proved her kids were legitimate and that she had a man to look after her. During the war they were forged for men from non-precious metals, as a reminder of who soldiers overseas were fighting for. But they didnât catch on as jewellery until the 1960s.
This shift was fuelled half by the rise of European style â Italian men have never been as squeamish about jewellery â but also second-wave feminism, which tried to put both partners in a marriage on an equal footing. âA wedding ring tends to be a clean, simple band,â says Walsh. âItâs an expression of commitment.â Designs tend to be inward- rather than outward-facing: an engraving against the skin is always more personal than a giant jewel.
Signet Ring
The OG menâs ring, the signet was first worn by the Ancient Egyptians, who used them to stamp official documents. In Britain, they were engraved with a back-to-front family crest; when sealing a letter with wax, youâd deboss it with your signet to prove it actually came from you. They were traditionally family heirlooms and signified plush roots â you had to have a coat of arms to actually engrave on your signet â but by the 19th century, new money types could buy their own heraldry. The signet lost some of its cache.
These days, theyâre still handed down within families, but also come with all manner of designs; Gianni Versace wore one bearing his labelâs Medusa head. âTheyâve usually got a flat face, to accommodate engraving,â says Walsh, and then to be chunkier and more eye-catching than a wedding band.
Fashion Rings
There are other rings that men wear for tradition, not aesthetics, but theyâre rare. Which means most everything else is lumped in as âfashionâ â a ring you wear just because you like the look, not because tradition says you should. These can range from designer bling to something with a story that you picked up from a car boot sale. âItâs an expression of your character,â says Walsh. âYou can wear them on any finger, alone or in multiples.â
That gives more leeway for esoteric choices. âAsk yourself whether itâs for a lifetime, or for a moment,â says Walsh. The answer, as with anything you wear, will inform how much to invest. âTake advice [on the style] if you like, but also go with your gut. If you instinctively like it, youâll wear it well.â