Visit Solomon Jewelers in Wichita for engagement rings, custom design, and fine jewelry

Book a private bridal or custom jewelry consultation today




Use coupon code WELCOME10 for 10% off your first order.

Cart 0

¡Felicidades! Su pedido está calificado para el envío libre You are $100 away from free shipping.
Lo siento, parece que no tenemos suficiente de este producto.

Par con
¿Es esto un regalo?
Costo sin impuestos Gratis
Ver carrito
Antes de los impuestos y gastos de envío.

How to Stack Rings: The Art of Wearing Multiple Rings Well

Ring stacking — wearing multiple rings across one or both hands — has become one of the most expressive forms of jewelry styling. Done well, it looks intentional and personal. Done poorly, it looks accidental. Here's how to get it right.

Start With an Anchor Ring

Every stack benefits from an anchor — usually a more substantial ring that sets the tone. An engagement ring, a bold signet, or a wider band works well as the anchor. Everything else in the stack relates to it.

Mix Textures, Not Necessarily Metals

Mixing textures — polished and hammered, plain and pavé, flat and rounded — creates visual interest within a stack. Metal mixing (yellow and white gold) can also work beautifully, but it requires some intention. A fully mixed-metal stack can look deliberately eclectic; a mostly single-metal stack with one accent in a different metal can look elegantly curated.

Vary Widths

A stack of identically wide bands looks uniform but flat. Mix narrow (1–2mm) bands with medium (3–4mm) and occasional statement widths. The variation creates rhythm across the fingers.

Consider Spacing

Rings stacked tightly together read as a deliberate set. Rings with gaps between them look more casual and layered. Both work — but spacing should be consistent if you're going for a clean look.

The Wedding Band + Engagement Ring Stack

The most common stacking question: how do I make my wedding band work with my engagement ring? The answer depends on your ring's profile. Some engagement rings are designed with a notch or curve to accommodate a specific matching band — those are the easiest. For solitaires with a plain round shank, most straight bands stack cleanly. For rings with pavé down the sides, you may want a contoured band that follows the curve of the engagement ring's profile.

Building a Stack Over Time

The most meaningful stacks are built slowly — adding pieces that represent moments, milestones, or personal significance. An anniversary band. A birthstone ring. A piece inherited from family. Don't try to build a complete stack at once. Let it accumulate.

Shop rings at Solomon Jewelers → or visit us in Wichita →