Americus
Diamond offers a wide selection of jewelry in platinum and white
gold.
What are the differences between platinum and white gold?
- When platinum emerges from the ground, it is a naturally white
metal. To make white gold, yellow gold is alloyed with copper
and silver, along with small amounts of nickel, zinc, or palladium
to achieve a semi-white look.
- Platinum weighs 60% more than 14-karat gold.
- Because it is more rare, platinum is more expensive than white
gold.
- White gold is a shiny metal as it wears. Platinum is not as
shiny and maintains a silver patina as it wears.
- White gold is easier to polish than platinum. When scratched,
platinum will actually separate to make room for the scratch
without loss of metal. Both metals are soft and will scratch
and bend with pressure.
- To achieve its white appearance, white gold is plated with
rhodium, which is from the platinum family. To maintain white
gold’s white look, it must be occasionally re-plated.
Platinum will hold a finish such as Florentine longer than white
gold.
- Platinum jewelry is 90%-95% pure platinum, making it very
pure and hypoallergenic. Gold jewelry is 58% (14 karat) or 75%
(18 karat) gold and is mixed with other alloys, which can cause
allergic reactions in some people.
The bottom line: there is no perfect metal. When you come
to Americus Diamond, we will show you the differences between
the metals and help you select the best option for your jewelry.
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