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FAQ: Rhodium Plating & White Gold

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  1. I can't get a straight answer! Is all gold yellow or not? Gold is an element and it is yellow; there are no isotopes of gold that are white or any other color. Therefore pure 24 kt gold is always yellow. But jewelry is never made from 24 kt gold anyway because it is far too soft to be usable.

  2. What color is "jewelry gold" then? Gold jewelry is made from an alloy of gold plus other metals. 12 kt gold, for example, is 12/24ths gold and 12/24ths other metals. The color of the alloy will depend on what those other metals are, and in what proportion. If the other metals are copper and silver, the jewelry will be yellow.

  3. What exactly is "white gold" then? 12 karat white gold would be half gold and half other metals, including palladium and/or nickel. These metals have a bleaching effect so that the mixture will be whitish. Nickel is much cheaper than palladium, so nickel is widely used in white gold jewelry in the U.S.; but so many people are allergic to nickel that it is forbidden in jewelry in Europe, and palladium would be used there instead.

  4. What is rhodium and what does it have to do with white gold jewelry? Now it gets interesting! Rhodium is a precious metal more than ten times as costly as gold. Rhodium is not a feasible material to make solid jewelry from because it is too stressed and brittle. But rhodium is great as a thin plating for jewelry because it is glitteringly, dazzlingly, white and mirror-like. Nothing sets off diamonds like rhodium plating does. But it is only a plating and therefore it will wear off after some period of time and require replating.

  5. Have things changed between your grandmother's white gold ring and yours? Yes! Years ago, white gold rings were not rhodium plated; today they usually are. Which is better and why? Well, if you feel that heirlooms should not require replating, you won't be happy with a rhodium plated ring because it will. But if you love today's brilliant, dazzling, ultra-white diamond-like look, you simply can't get it from an unplated ring, and you never could. No matter how well it's made, an alloy which is about half yellow gold can never even come close to offering the flashy glint of rhodium plating. Yes, your grandmother's ring lasted decades and never needed plating, but it was never glittery and dazzling like today's rings -- it was white enough for her taste in a different time.

  6. Where's the part where it starts to really suck? Right here! If today's rings were like your grandmother's ring except with a layer of rhodium plated onto them, few people would be unhappy. If you wanted it to knock your eye out you'd get it replated frequently; and if a more antique look pleased you, and you object to replating heirlooms, you'd just let the plating wear off or ask the jeweler not to plate it.

    But most of today's rings are not of the same alloy as your grandmother's! Once the jewelers recognized that "it's going to be rhodium plated anyway" they talked themselves into accepting that the underlying metal didn't need to be the pleasing shade of your grandmother's ring. White gold is graded by color, i.e., whether it's white enough to be left unplated -- and most of today's white gold isn't (if interested, see the article White Gold Alloys: Colour Measurement and Grading at www.goldbulletin.org/downloads/Henderson_2_38.pdf which explains this whiteness factor). In fact, jewelry stores in the center aisle of malls apparently sometimes rhodium plate yellow gold rings, and the contrast as they start to wear is terrible!

How long will the plating last? This is a very important question, but the answer isn't easy. First, it depends on whether it's a ring you wear every day and which therefore suffers a great deal of wear, or a pin or broach which receives almost no contact. And it depends to some extent on that old bugaboo "body chemistry". But it also depends on two other very important factors --

  1. How good is the quality of the plating? Good quality plating will last far longer than a very thin layer of plating applied from a teacup of contaminated plating solution in the back room of the jewelry shop. Courtesy of Metal Arts Specialties / www.artisanplating.com we offer a tutorial about rhodium plating.

  2. What color is the underlying gold? If the white gold underlying the rhodium plating is a nice acceptable color, there will be nothing jarring as the plating begins to wear thin in spots, so you can go a long time between replating. If the color is slightly yellowish, more frequent replating will be necessary because the item will look poor sooner. And if the underlying material is actually yellow gold, the contrast will be dramatic, and replating will be required very frequently. Yes, you can get your yellow gold jewelry rhodium plated, but if the piece experiences significant wear, the good appearance may last only a fairly short time even if the rhodium plating quality is good, and almost no time if the plating is poor.

Here are some Q&A threads on the subject if you wish to read more:

  • Letter 1237. Plating rhodium on white gold
  • Letter 5844. Response to white gold issue
  • Letter 8502. Rhodium plating
  • Letter 9403. Test to determine if band is white gold or yellow gold plated with rhodium
  • Letter 10113. Quick fade Rhodium plating
  • Letter 10202. White gold discoloration
  • Letter 12798. Rhodium plating over yellow gold
  • Letter 13132. White gold or Rhodium plated confusion or deception 
  • Letter 15419. Rhodium plating
  • Letter 22709. Sizing rhodium plated white gold rings
  • Letter 26618. Rhodium plating a white gold ring with engraved detail

If this list didn't cover what you were looking for, please Search the site because this is only a sample of the dozens of threads we have on this topic. Good luck, and if you found this page informative, please tell others about it!

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