The details.

Tungsten carbide is the hardest common ring metal going — this band will stay scratch-free through farm work, rugby, and general hard use that would mark up anything softer. The weight is solid and substantial without being uncomfortable. The surface keeps its polish for years with minimal care. One thing to be aware of: tungsten can't be resized, so measure your finger carefully before ordering. Also, for blokes working around machinery, consider a silicone ring as a worksite alternative. Tungsten looks sharp and stays that way.

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Caring for your Diamond-Set ring

Diamonds are the hardest natural material on earth, but the metal claws, channels or bezels holding them in place are not — that's where care matters most. Clean diamond-set rings every couple of weeks by soaking in warm water with a drop of dish soap, brushing gently behind the stones with a soft toothbrush (skin oil and soap residue build up there and dull the sparkle), and rinsing well. Pat dry with a lint-free cloth.

Take the ring off for gardening, weightlifting and heavy DIY — a knock against concrete or steel can chip a diamond corner or bend a claw. Once a year, get any NZ jeweller to check the settings for free; catching a loose claw early is the difference between a quick re-tip and losing the stone. Avoid wearing it in chlorinated pools and spas if the band is white gold, since chlorine attacks the alloy that holds the stones.

Common questions about Diamond-Set rings

Can a diamond fall out of a men's ring?

It's uncommon but possible — usually after a hard knock bends a claw, or after years of wear gradually wears the metal down. Annual claw checks at any NZ jeweller (free service) catch the problem before the stone is lost. Channel-set and flush-set diamonds are more secure than claw-set for active wear.

How do I clean diamonds at home?

Soak the ring for 15 minutes in warm water with a drop of dish soap, then brush gently behind and around the stones with a soft toothbrush. Rinse and pat dry with a lint-free cloth. Avoid bleach, chlorine and abrasive cleaners — these attack the metal setting, not the stone.

Are lab-grown diamonds different from natural ones?

Chemically and visually identical — same hardness, same sparkle, same care requirements. Lab-grown stones cost roughly 60–70% less than natural in NZ, which is why most diamond-set men's rings under $3,000 NZD now use them. Both are graded on the same 4Cs scale.

Can I insure a diamond ring in New Zealand?

Yes — most NZ home-and-contents policies cover jewellery up to a sub-limit (usually $2,000–$5,000) and let you add named items above that. Keep your purchase invoice and any independent valuation; insurers ask for both at claim time.

Considering alternatives?

Most diamond-set men's rings are bought as wedding bands — browse the full range of mens wedding rings to see diamond-set options alongside plain bands in tungsten, titanium, gold and platinum. Adding even a single small flush-set diamond lifts a plain band into the wedding-ring category without the maintenance load of a fully pavé setting.