Two-tone Crossover Wedding Rings
Nowadays the industry of wedding rings became even more wild and wide, lots of innovative and unconventional designs are brought to life each year, while old styles are reinvented and updated in order to suit the new expectations of the modern couples.
In this article we are going to discuss about the crossover style and hope that you will find it just as amazing, original and elegant as we do. This precious design is not quite a fresh apparition on the market. The crossover style used to make a very popular and chic choice for many brides and grooms from the Victorian era. In that period the crossover style was a little bit more delicate and refined. But does a crossover style means? Well, as you can observe from these images, the ring features two bars that meet on the point where the ring rests on the finger or the criss cross one on top of the other, forming a unique lovely and perfect x shape.
The bars can be different in width, wideness, design, pattern or color, depending on how elaborated and spectacular the ring should be in the end. You can find lots of gorgeous and chic crossover wedding rings made of two different types of metals (like the ones we’re showing here today), different types of gemstones or diamond cuts and shapes. The bars can be curved or straight, while the gemstones can have different colors. You can find not only two-tone crossover wedding rings but also crossover rings adorned with both diamonds and gemstones featured on each separated bar. But this is a personal selection and it is always related to how glamorous, original and distinctive one wants to look.
The two-tone metal style is usually purchased by grooms who don’t want the standard plain gold wedding band look. But a two-tone crossover wedding ring – like the ones in these pictures are also suitable for brides who want a more imposing, elegant and bold look. Among the most popular or typical types of metal combinations that are made for two-tone wedding rings we mention: white gold and yellow gold, platinum and yellow gold, rose gold and white gold, silver and yellow gold, titanium and yellow gold or palladium and yellow gold. As you can see, the yellow gold metal is used in most cases as a basic metal that can be combined with almost any other metal.



