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About Real Gold Chains
What "Real Gold" Actually Means on a Chain
The karat stamp on a gold chain is a legal guarantee of its gold content — enforced by the FTC in the United States and by equivalent standards bodies internationally. 10K means the metal is 41.7% pure gold; 14K means 58.5%; 18K means 75%. The remaining percentage in each case is alloy metal — copper, silver, zinc, or palladium — added to increase hardness, adjust color, and make the gold practical for jewelry manufacturing. A stamp of '14K' means every link in the chain meets this standard, not just the surface.
Gold plating deposits a thin gold layer — typically 0.5 to 2.5 microns — over a base metal core such as brass or copper. That layer wears at the points of highest friction: the back of the chain where it contacts the neck, the clasp, and any area that rubs against clothing or skin. A quality gold-plated piece may last one to five years before the base metal shows through; a heavily worn plated piece may show wear within months. Karat gold wears too — but what wears away is gold, not a coating over something else. The piece remains gold throughout its life.
For a real gold chain, construction quality works alongside karat to determine longevity. The link geometry, wall thickness, solder joints, and clasp mechanism determine how the chain holds up under daily stress. Italian chain manufacturing has been optimizing these variables for generations — the production techniques for gold chain in Italy's jewelry-producing regions (Arezzo, Valenza, Vicenza) represent accumulated expertise that translates into chains that hold their construction integrity over decades of wear.