7 Do’s and Don’ts for Men’s Jewelry

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At a glance, it might seem as though men today approach jewelry from two extremes: either they consider it effeminate and wear little or none, or they wear it excessively and look like a showoff (or a mobster)! In truth, though, a gentleman knows he shouldn’t fall into either of these two camps, and that balance is key. With that in mind, let’s discuss the most common types of jewelry in classic menswear, and 7 smart suggestions for how to wear (or not wear) them.

Throughout history and across different cultures, what can and cannot be worn by men has varied and still varies greatly. For example, if you think of the Maharajas in India or the French kings of the 18th century with their showy gems, it could be considered to be effeminate or over the top in this day and age. However, if anything, history has shown us that wearing jewelry as men is something very normal. By definition, jewelry is an accessory that is made in parts of metal or gemstones or semi-precious stones that serve as ornamentation and doesn’t necessarily have any practical value.

Typical Pieces of Jewelry for Men

Cufflinks actually do serve a purpose but just because they do, doesn’t mean they’re not jewelry (because they are very decorative). When it comes to men’s jewelry apart from rings, cufflinks are probably the most widely worn item today. Most of them come in metals that are usually less expensive; more precious metals include sterling silver, yellow gold, rose gold, white gold, or platinum. You can have a sterling silver cufflink that is heavily plated with platinum or gold that will never rub off and you can pass on to your grandchildren.

Raphael's collection of cufflinks.
Raphael’s collection of cufflinks.

Sometimes cufflinks have decorative elements such as enamel or semi-precious stone inserts such as lapis lazuli or onyx or they could have sapphires or rubies. Sometimes, they’re also made out of shell such as mother of pearl or maybe some jade. Of course, cufflinks require you to wear a shirt that is made for them which is typically a French cuff or double cuff shirt that is folded over. For White Tie, you can also have a single-cuffed shirt that is also worn with cufflinks. In a more casual setting, you can sometimes find combination cuffs which are button cuffs but they also have two buttonholes so they can be worn with cufflinks.

Personally, I love to wear cufflinks and when I wear a suit, I usually always wear cufflinks and even with a sport coat. If you’re interested, you can click here to be taken to our guide that gives you a glimpse into my cufflink collection and if you’re interested in high-quality cufflinks at a fair price, check out the cufflinks at the Fort Belvedere Shop.

Raphael wearing the Eagle Claw Cufflinks with Onyx Ball from Fort Belvedere with his suit jacket.
Raphael wearing the Eagle Claw Cufflinks with Onyx Ball from Fort Belvedere with his suit jacket.

2. Shirt Studs & Waistcoat Buttons

Shirt studs and waistcoat buttons are not anymore as popular today, but traditionally, shirt studs were worn with formal outfits such as a Black Tie outfit or White Tie and they were just more decorative than the regular buttons you have sewn-on on dress shirts today. Often, those shirt studs would match the cufflinks and you basically have a set. Today, most people don’t attend many Black Tie functions and so, it’s really valuable to have a pair of cufflinks that can be worn independently of formal functions.

Also, if you travel, you can just bring one set of shirt studs and cufflinks and you can wear it with regular events, with business events, and for formal events. Because of that, I designed a set with monkey fist cufflinks that you can find here. You can buy them independently,  you can wear them independently, but it’s kind of the one set that works for all.

shirt studs
Some would match their shirt studs, cufflinks, and waistcoat buttons all in the same look.

Traditionally, men would also wear removable matching waistcoat buttons so you had shirt studs, cufflinks, and waistcoat buttons all in the same look. This was called a full dress set and today, you can’t really find them new anymore. You have to buy them vintage, but if you go to all those lengths and dress up for black tie and white tie, you might as well go the extra mile, especially if you’re into clothes and it’s just a hobby and a passion for you just like it is for me.

3. Watches

A watch is functional as it tells you time, but ultimately today, it’s more of a jewelry piece for most men especially if they invest a lot of money into it to show off certain complications or just a really cool look. Of course, one could argue if it has a leather strap, it’s more of an accessory. If it has a metal band, it’s more of a piece of jewelry, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. It’s all about what you think and how you feel.

Raphael looking dapper with his watch that pairs well with his outfit.
Raphael looking dapper with his watch that pairs well with his outfit.

As a funny side note, historically, it was impolite to have a watch with you because if you would look at it in company, you would imply that you had better things to do which would have been considered to be rude. Then came the pocket watch and today, people wear their Rolex Submariner with their tuxedo outfits even though it doesn’t make sense from a formality point of view.

4. Rings

Perhaps, the most obvious jewelry item a man can wear is a classic ring; the most common one being the wedding band or the wedding ring but you can also have things like a pinky ring or a signet ring. If you want to know how many rings you should wear and what’s the specific meaning of a ring if you wear it on your thumb or your middle finger, our guide to Men’s Ring Meaning & Definitions can surely be of help.

Personally, I like rings a lot and I have quite the collection. Typically, I wear a wedding band and one other ring–be the pinky ring or something on the ring finger on the opposite hand.

Some men like Raphael would wear a pinky ring on one hand and their wedding band on the other.
Some men like Raphael would wear a pinky ring on one hand and their wedding band on the other.

5. Tie Bars or Tie Clips

Particularly, men who don’t just dress up because they have to but because they want to find that a tie bar or a tie clip is just another thing they can add to make their outfit more special. A more functional advantage of a tie bar is if you have one shoulder that is lower than the other like me, your tie will have a tendency to go in one direction and a tie clip can keep it in place all day so it always looks neat.

Tie clips are an elegant example of having a functional item that still serves an ornamental purpose. Sometimes, you can even find vintage sets that have matching tie bars and cufflinks back in the 60s, 70s, and 80s, you could also find tie tacks and sometimes they had chains that held your tie in place. If you wear it today it gives you a certain vintage look which is okay. If that’s what you’re going for but it’s definitely a modern aesthetic.

A tie bar is worn to keep your tie in place.
A tie bar can also be worn to keep your tie in place.

If you go in the further back men wore tie stick pins which were just a pin that would go through your tie and no, it doesn’t damage it even though it leaves a little hole. Today, you can wear them with ascots, especially formal ones and maybe even with a formal three-piece suit. I like the look of it because it’s very subtle but it’s different. Prince Charles, for example, still wears them today and particularly with morning wear ensembles. If you want to learn how to use a stick pin for a formal cravat, please check out our guide here.

6. Collar Pins, Collar Clips & Collar Bars

Collar pins, clips, and bars are among the accessories that had their heyday during the 1930s. At that time, a lot of men would wear them over the years. They almost completely lost their appeal to Main Street and really only dandies or clotheshorses would wear them to underline their unique style. Fortunately, in recent years due to shows such as Boardwalk Empire, Mad Men, Peaky Blinders, or Perry Mason, more men have become aware of collar clips and collar pins and as a consequence, you see more men wearing them today.

Again, they’re typically worn by men who don’t feel like they have to wear a uniform but who see clothing as an expression of their personal style and they enjoy it. Traditionally, collar bars, clips, and pins were only worn with very narrow collars because you couldn’t have that much of a spread. It would slightly elevate the tie knot but today, collars are typically a bit more spread, so many of our customers asked us to make a wider collar clip; we listened and we did. To learn about wearing a collar clip or pin in your outfit without looking over the top, check out our guide on How To Style A Collar Clip.

7. Chains & Fobs

When the pocket watch was at its peak, men would of course also have a pocket watch chain that they would wear. Typically, the vest had a little hole or it was just pulled to a buttonhole and you would see it in the front and the pocket watch was in your vest pocket. If you wear a watch chain today, it adds a distinctive vintage look to your appearance and people typically only do it if they’re really into clothes. Personally, I really like wearing a double Albert chain with a hole in a double-breasted vest because it has this symmetrical look, has a little fob on it and it’s just very debonaire in my mind. 

When it became historically okay to wear a timepiece with your evening wear and people weren’t offended if you looked at it, first, you had really flat thin pocket watches and those wouldn’t be worn with a long watch chain but with a simple fabric fob or that was a bit decorative in your vest waistcoat pocket.

A pocket watch with an Albert chain.
A pocket watch with an Albert chain.

Today’s style icons such as Lino Ieluzzi have popularized chains in menswear again. For example, he uses it with a money clip in his pocket and then the other end of the chain being attached to a belt loop or a belt, so when he wears a jacket or a suit, it hangs out underneath and you can see it like with a pocket watch. This is definitely a more casual approach to wearing a chain but it’s nevertheless quite popular and modern, and it works well if you don’t want to be too stiff in your overall appearance.

8. Bracelets, Necklaces & Chains

If I look at my dad’s generation, I could often see men wearing necklaces or bracelets and I remember I used to wear one because my dad would and so I got one. I even got a silver bracelet on one of our Turkey vacations back in the day. In combination with a mullet, five rings on your fingers, and a strong tan, you can look like you’re straight up in New Jersey from the 1980s.

A more modern approach to bracelets is semi-precious stones such as tiger’s eye or onyx or lapis lazuli. In my mind, they’re a bit of a fad and I’m sure they won’t stay around. They’re also not really part of the classic men’s style realm, at the same time, all the younger people like to wear it and it’s more in line with a casual approach to style. Heavy link chains are typically of gold or in gold colors and they’re sometimes bedazzled with diamonds and they have become a status of wealth in society today; they’re not something that is classically associated with permanent men’s style.

tigers eye bracelet
A tiger’s eye bracelet.

9. Belt Buckles

Most people will think of belt buckles as a very functional item and not an ornamentation item but if you think about it, cowboys, for example, have sterling silver buckles with inlaid turquoise or you can spend thousands of dollars on Hermes H buckles in precious metals, for example, that are definitely more of a jewelry piece than a functional piece even though they serve a functional use.

Personally, I like to match the color of my belt buckle to the rest of my accessories and to do that very effectively, I work with a belt system that allows me to change the style and color of my belt buckle very easily with all the belts I have in my collection. You can learn more about this technique from our How to Pair Belts & Shoes (and Your Metal Accessories) guide.

The Fort Belvedere belt buckle matches the metal on the shoe
The Fort Belvedere belt buckle matches the metal on the shoe
Tan Cognac Brown Calf Leather Belt Aniline Dyed Cut-To-Size - Folded Edges 3cm x 120cm

Fort Belvedere

Tan Cognac Brown Calf Leather Belt Aniline Dyed Cut-To-Size – Folded Edges 3cm x 120cm

Benedict Gold Solid Brass Belt Buckle Exchangeable Oblong Rectangle with Gold Plating Hypoallergenic Nickel Free

Fort Belvedere

Benedict Gold Solid Brass Belt Buckle Exchangeable Oblong Rectangle with Gold Plating Hypoallergenic Nickel Free

10. Lapel Pins or Chains

Even though lapel pins or chains are quite a rare sight, they still are around and I’ve found that in recent years they’ve become more popular than maybe 20 years ago. It’s either a pin that goes through the buttonhole of your lapel or sometimes it’s a chain that drapes from the buttonhole down into your pocket. Sometimes they’re old pocket watch chains that just have been repurposed.

Just like a boutonniere, a lapel pin can make you stand out a bit more because it’s a bit more uncommon. But even politicians sometimes have little pins there that show their association to their country or their alma mater.

lapel chains
Lapel chains

Dos and Don’ts for Men’s Jewelries

1. Don’t Show Off

The first rule is to skip jewelry that has big branding on it or that’s super ostentatious unless of course, you want to impress others with your status symbols rather than your intellect, humor, or charm. Frankly, trying to impress others with their expensive Hermes belts or Rolex watches typically means that there’s an insecurity that you have to overcome because you don’t feel valued enough by others without them.

Always keep in mind, jewelry catches the eye because it’s typically made of metal or reflective and it is made to draw your attention to it. As a general rule of thumb, less is more and if someone calls it bling, it’s a good indicator that it’s too much.

Trying to impress people by wearing expensive jewelry is often linked to insecurities that a person needs to overcome.
Trying to impress people with expensive jewelry is often linked to insecurities that a person needs to overcome.

So, if you wear a White Tie or Black Tie, you don’t have to wear that watch and it was historically acceptable to do so. Cufflinks for daywear are typically made out of just gold or silver without any bold diamonds that are sparkling and just showy. Of course, some precious stones are different because they’re less showy; they just pick up a color that’s in your tie. But, at the end of the day, it’s your style, and if you want to be bolder and wear bolder colors and more jewelry go for it just be aware of how it could be perceived by others.

2. Don’t Wear Too Many Jewelries At Once

Coco Chanel’s advice to women was to always look in the mirror and then remove one accessory and the same holds true for men. A common misconception is that more jewelry is more formal, but a little dose of minimalism can really help. So, if you have one loud ring or signature cufflinks keep the rest really toned down.

 Coco Chanel

“Before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take one thing off.”

Coco chanel

For rings, most men are fine with a wedding band and maybe one other ring on the opposite hand. If you look at pictures of Pitti Uomo, you see a bunch of guys wearing stacked bracelets and other accessories which is a good way to show that too much is just not a good take because it looks overloaded.

3. Don’t Wear Oversized Jewelry

For men, that could be an extremely big gold watch or a ring that resembles that of an NFL championship ring. Usually, big expensive rings or items of jewelry for men are really no different than a status symbol. It’s an equivalent of a woman wearing a really big engagement ring and holding it in a way that everyone can see how much money someone spent on you. It can easily come across as looking cheap or like a mobster or drug lord. Keep in mind that subtlety is the key to true elegance.

Oversized jewelry
Avoid wearing oversized jewelry

4. Do Choose The Right Proportions for Your Jewelry

If you are a bigger person and you have bigger fingers, by all means, go with a ring that is more substantial. If you’re a very thin guy, maybe a thinner band works just like a thinner tie would or a jacket with skinnier lapels. In the same way, if you have thin wrists and have a small build, well a smaller watch is better than one with a larger diameter.

Choose a piece of jewelry that has the right proportion with your body.
Choose a piece of jewelry that has the right proportion with your body.

5. Do Select Jewelry That Has A Personal Meaning

There is a reason why Pandora is so commercially successful because they allow women to commemorate certain events in their life and make it part of their jewelry bracelet. Men can do the same with a watch, a signet ring, or a pair of cufflinks that can commemorate an important step in their life. It can be something they reward themselves for or it can be tied to a relative like your father, your uncle who handed it down to you, which then makes the jewelry very special to you and is above its materialistic value.

At the same time, be careful not to be too kitschy and maybe have political party affiliations made part of your jewelry. It will likely just alienate people and it’s the equivalent of wearing t-shirts with bold messages on them.

Do not wear t-shirts with bold messages in them
Statement shirts won’t be dapper.

6. Do Match Your Metals

That may sound simple at first but once you think about all the different metals in your outfits it can be quite tricky. If you don’t happen to have a matching metal for everything, that’s okay, don’t be self-conscious, and just wear it. If you can make it all work together, consider it and the overall result will be better. And no, if your wedding band is gold or silver, you should always leave it on and not try to take it off or mix and match other things because again, it has a meaning and that’s more important than matching up the colors.

Always try to match your metals
Always try to match your metals
Collar Pin Safety Pin Gold from Fort Belvedere

Collar Pin Safety Pin Gold

Collar Pin Safety Pin Gold

Collar Bar Clip in Yellow Gold For Classic Narrow Spread Collars

Fort Belvedere

Collar Bar Clip in Yellow Gold For Classic Narrow Spread Collars

Monkey Fist Knot Cufflinks - Vermeil Sterling Silver Yellow Gold Plated - Fort Belvedere

Fort Belvedere

Monkey Fist Knot Cufflinks – Vermeil Sterling Silver Yellow Gold Plated

Black Calf Leather Belt Aniline Dyed Cut-To-Size - Folded Edges 3cm x 120cm - Fort Belvedere

Fort Belvedere

Black Calf Leather Belt Aniline Dyed Cut-To-Size – Folded Edges 3cm x 120cm

Jasper Gold Solid Brass Belt Buckle Rounded Rectangle Exchangeable with Gold Plating Hypoallergenic Nickel Free

Fort Belvedere

Jasper Gold Solid Brass Belt Buckle Rounded Rectangle Exchangeable with Gold Plating Hypoallergenic Nickel Free

7. Do Choose Jewelry Based on The Occasion

This is not just true for clothing in general, but particularly for jewelry, you wouldn’t want to show up or bedazzled at a funeral because that would draw the attention to you and your status symbols or shiny objects rather than to the deceased. Another example is if you’re going to a job interview, it’s probably wise not to wear your most expensive Rolex watch. On the other hand, though, when you’re negotiating a business deal and the other person wants to see that they’re dealing with an accomplished business person, that Rolex may actually help you. Remember that there’s no cut and clear rule about what to wear, it all depends on the situation.

It's not advisable to wear an expensive watch like a Rolex Submariner to a job interview
It’s not advisable to wear an expensive watch like a Rolex Submariner to a job interview

Conclusion

In conclusion, we all have different styles and someone can pull-off wearing earrings, a number of bracelets, and rings and it just works with their overall style. But if you look at it from a lens of the classic permanent style, all the jewelry items and rules we’ve laid out here will serve you well. Always keep in mind that when you’re in doubt, always tone it down and go with less than more.

How do you like to wear your jewelry–or are you someone who wears little or none? Tell us in the comments!

Outfit Rundown

I’m wearing a combination consisting of a light blue shirt with french cuffs. I’m wearing a pair of contrasting purple glass cufflinks with gold metal elements and I’m combining it with a striped tie. It’s a vintage one from Brooks Brothers and an olive green sport coat. My pocket square picks up the tones of greens and blues and yellows, and it’s paisley from Fort Belvedere. My ring is a wedding band in gold with a little milgrain pattern and then I have a citrine gold ring.

Raphael in an olive green sport coat and navy blue trousers
Raphael in an olive green sport coat and navy blue trousers
Grey Blue & Prussian Blue Two Tone Solid Oxford Socks Fil d'Ecosse Cotton - Fort Belvedere

Fort Belvedere

Grey Blue & Prussian Blue Two Tone Solid Oxford Socks Fil d'Ecosse Cotton

Burgundy Silk Wool Pocket Square with Paisley in Beige, Blue, Green and Pink and beige shoestring edge - Fort Belvedere

Fort Belvedere

Burgundy Silk Wool Pocket Square with Paisley in Beige, Blue, Green and Pink and beige shoestring edge

Again, I’m matching the colors of the metal and it also ties in to the stripe in my tie. My slacks are also part of a suit and there is solid navy blue with cuffs. I’m combining them with olive green shoes that pick up the color of the jacket and to provide a visual interesting element without being overboard. I’m combining it with a two-tone pair of socks from Fort Belvedere in a darker blue and kind of a prussian blue which provides a very interesting look depending on how the light shines on them without being too dramatic.

Reader Comments

    1. I was thinking the same thing! I personally love tie chains, even though I am more of a bow tie person.

  1. It is not entirely correct to say that the chains are not associated with the permanent men’s style.
    Especially in Latin countries it is traditional to wear a gold chain with a cross (or a family memento or other symbol with particular meaning) around the neck. The difference in style is that the gentleman’s chain is thin, worn under the shirt collar without wanting to be visible; the inelegant person wears a large chain to show it, under a very open shirt.

  2. Do you have a source for the shirt studs shown in the image captioned “Shirt studs were traditionally worn in Black Tie or White Tie outfits.”? I found them quite attractive, and was wondering if they might be something fort Belvedere would provide, or if they came from somewhere else.

  3. Pic of Sven in Panama hat molto Gatsby. Pic of Sven in chains perfect dress for the “links.” Great article Dr. Lee.

  4. Freemasons in lodges that have a strict(er) dress code often wear matching shirt studs and cufflinks with black tie… The most popular ones are those with the square and compasses – the well-known symbol of Masonry. Signet type rings with Masonic symbols are also popular.

    1. They also carry a “cane” at the end of a password. I’m sure you catch the drift brother.

  5. Thanks for the article – you are so on target. It’s my hope more men could read this and be advised for a timely yet classic approach to jewelry use for men.

  6. Very good video. I don’t wear a lot of jewelry. Routinely, I wear my wedding ring, a watch, and my class ring.. I wear french cuff shirts very often so I have quite a collection of cuff links. Most of them are discrete, but I wear my Santa Clause cuff links around Christmas. I have my dad’s great-uncle’s pocket watch made around 1892. It’s on a chain and I always carry it when I wear a vest. Living in the South, I wear vests only in the colder months. The watch and chain brings quite few comments. The fob is my honor society key. .

  7. Great use of in house treasures. Less is more, is always best. I would include the Cartier Tank in you collection.

  8. I grew up in New Jersey in the 1980s. I recall sack suits, repp ties and Weejuns. I was partial to varsity jackets, too. The always elegant Charles Osgood was a neighbor, and I fondly remember hockey tournaments in Tuxedo Park, dinners at the Knickerbocker and afternoon tea in NYC. False tanning didn’t really come into play until the nineties, and mullets seem to come and go as they please every twenty years or so.

    That decade also marks the moment that elements from prep and hip-hop culture began to cross-pollinate. The results were excellent—and remain, in some important ways, the defining evolution of masculine style for most men alive today.

    I think what happens in these sweeping subject treatments is we forget that men’s style has always been deeply referential, and informed by niche cultural fashions and personal predilection. I’m sure it caused quite a stir for some when London’s younger gents began forgoing fussy fobs for wristwatches, as it likely did when tuxedoes appeared in place of white tie and tails. And what of the cummerbund—that flamboyant sash borrowed from India?

    The point, I suppose, is picking the cultural references you approve or disapprove of is at best a fool’s errand. In practice, though, it reads as priggish and pedantic, and demonstrates a less nuanced grasp of the subject than your audience deserves.

    Rather than putting chains around your neck—which ranges in interpretation from clumsy to downright offensive—you should be asking yourself and your audience: what, really, is the difference between a cummerbund and a cuban link?

    I recommend GG spend some time in a big American city—say, NYC or Miami or LA. If you look closely, I think you’ll find many gents demonstrating how the classic forms you hold dear inform their cultural or personal choices. And, if you’re really paying attention, you might even glimpse the reverse.

    1. Clothing is a language, with which you communicate something about yourself and your vision of the world. And it is certainly conditioned by places, times, fashions. But not all languages are the same: there are those who use the rules correctly, who express profound concepts, who have a wealth of words; and there are poor languages. Classic clothing was not born in a season, for the inspiration of a designer; but it has settled over the decades. The progressive additions and modifications, the openings to new cultural influences, to local uses, were not accidental: they were the expression of an aesthetic project and a common feeling, even in different cultures. There is a big difference between a cummerbund and a cuban link: those who have the ability to analyze the structure of the classical language can understand this difference.

  9. No one wears fobs, tie bars, or cufflinks. A man needs a statement ring. Throw that signet ring away. No 14k, and don’t show me anything without diamonds. I wear 2 rings. 1 with champagne diamonds and one with brilliant cut, and sapphires. Both in extremely good taste. It took a while to find them. Not that much money. If a man is going to have jewelry, it better be in good taste. Remember, less is more. Plus, you have to work at it. My favorite chain is a 14k white gold number from JCPenney. I bought it on sale for $170. My champagne diamond ring was $1100, at JCPenney. All on sale. The sapphire and diamond ring, retailed for $4500. I paid , $710 at a pawn shop. So jewelry is out there. I worked at a pawn shop in college. You sometimes have to think outside the box. Often there are pendants in the women’s, that are quite acceptable. I have a half carat blue diamond solitaire pendant, in a white gold bezel setting. $900 at JCPenney. (They had a remarkable jewelry department,) I have also purchased many items on Ebay. It depends on how much you want it, and the hard work finding it.

  10. Mens jewellery is on trend and having the best tips and tricks to maintain mens jewellery is a must. This is an awesome post, keep up the good work.

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