The Journal

14 or 18 Karat Rose Gold — Why We Made a Deliberate Choice

The question sounds technical, yet it determines the colour, durability and value of your jewellery. Here is the honest comparison — and why we made a clear choice.

Karat is not a measure of quality, but of pure gold content. 24 karat would be pure gold — too soft for jewellery. To create rose gold, the gold is blended with copper and a little silver. It is precisely this ratio that separates 14 from 18 karat.

The Difference in Numbers

18 karat (750) consists of 75% pure gold. The result is a warm, rich depth of colour and a noticeably more refined weight. 14 karat (585) contains 58.5% gold; thanks to the higher proportion of added metals, it is harder, but its colour is paler and cooler.

"We could have chosen the cheaper path. We chose the more enduring one."

Why We Choose 18 Karat

At Rosé. Fine Jewellery., every piece — with one deliberate exception — is made from 18 karat rose gold. This decision rests on three reasons. First, colour: only at 18 karat does rose gold reveal that warm, deep tone that makes it so unmistakable. Second, lasting value: a higher gold content means your piece preserves its material worth across generations. Third, skin tolerance: as 18 karat contains fewer added metals, it is often the gentler choice for sensitive skin.

The Deliberate Exception: The Piercing Backing

For our fine piercings, we craft the backing — the part within the piercing channel — from 14 karat. This is not a compromise but a considered choice: 14 karat is more robust in this high-stress area, making it ideal for a secure, lasting fit. The visible part, of course, remains 18 karat.

A Question of Value, Not Just Price

18 karat is more expensive to buy — but it retains its value, its colour and its beauty for longer. For us, this is not a surcharge but a promise: that a piece meant to last a lifetime is also made from the right material.

Discover our 18 karat collection