Gold Pendants
(49 products)Gold Pendants — The Most Personal Gold Jewelry You Can Wear.
A pendant sits at the center of the chest, at eye level, and moves with the wearer. It's the piece people notice first and comment on most. The construction choices — hollow vs. solid, bail type, surface finish — determine not just appearance but how the pendant behaves over years of wear.
Hollow vs. Solid: What It Actually Means
Hollow pendant construction is a technique pioneered in the Italian jewelry districts of Arezzo and Valenza: a sheet of gold is formed over a die to create a three-dimensional form with no solid interior. A solid 14K cross in the same dimensions as a hollow one can cost five to ten times more for the same appearance.
Matching Your Pendant to Its Chain
The bail — the loop or connector that attaches to the chain — has a maximum chain width it will accept. A narrow bail won't accommodate a thick chain, and a large pendant on a very thin chain can slide off-center under its own weight. As a rule, chain width should be 20–40% of the pendant's visual width.
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About Gold Pendants
The Construction Decision Most Buyers Don't Know to Ask About
Hollow pendant construction is a specific technique developed in the Italian jewelry districts of Arezzo and Valenza: a sheet of gold is formed over a shaped die to create a three-dimensional form with no solid metal inside. The technique exists because it allows goldsmiths to create large, visually substantial pieces — crosses, hearts, medallions — that would be prohibitively expensive in solid gold. A solid 14K cross in the same dimensions as a hollow one might cost five to ten times more for the same outward appearance.
The practical implication: hollow pendants are not structurally weaker than solid ones under normal wear. The gold shell holds its shape in daily wear without issue. The difference only becomes relevant if the pendant takes a sharp direct impact — solid gold dents or scratches; hollow gold can deform more significantly if struck hard. For jewelry worn around the neck and handled normally, hollow construction is a sound choice and the reason large pendant designs are accessible at real prices.
Matching pendant to chain is a matter of proportion. The bail — the loop or connector that attaches to the chain — has a maximum chain width it will accept. A narrow bail won't accommodate a thick chain, and a large pendant on a very thin chain will slide off-center under its own weight. As a general rule, chain width should be roughly 20–40% of the pendant's visual width for a balanced look.