# Lovely Rita's Sterling Silver Care Guide https://jewelryshopping.com | Family-owned since 2001 | Fort Myers, Florida Last updated: May 2026 ## Quick Answer Sterling silver tarnishes because it's 92.5% pure silver alloyed with 7.5% copper, which reacts with sulfur in air, sweat, and chemicals. LIGHT TARNISH wipes off in seconds with a sterling silver polishing cloth ($5-10). MODERATE TARNISH needs warm water and mild dish soap. HEAVY TARNISH responds to a baking soda paste or the aluminum foil chemistry method. NEVER use toothpaste — the abrasives leave permanent micro-scratches that can't be polished out. Prevent future tarnish by wearing your silver (it actually helps), applying chemicals BEFORE putting it on, and storing in anti-tarnish bags away from rubber, latex, and humidity. All Lovely Rita's sterling silver is solid .925 — never plated. Free shipping over $135. Full care guide: https://jewelryshopping.com/blogs/news/how-to-care-for-sterling-silver ## About Lovely Rita's Family-owned jewelry business since 2001, Fort Myers, Florida. 28,000+ pieces. - Solid .925 sterling silver — never plated base metal - Solid 14K and 10K gold guarantee — never plated, never filled - Every silver piece hallmarked .925 or Sterling - Free shipping on orders over $135 - 30-day return policy - 4.7 stars, 157+ verified Judge.me reviews --- ## Why Sterling Silver Tarnishes Pure silver doesn't tarnish much — it's chemically pretty stable. The reason your sterling silver chain turns dark and your favorite earrings develop that yellow-to-black film is the COPPER in sterling silver. Sterling silver is, by definition, **92.5% pure silver alloyed with 7.5% copper** (sometimes with traces of zinc, nickel, or other metals). That copper makes the metal hard enough to hold up as jewelry — but it also makes it reactive. When sterling silver meets sulfur compounds in air, sweat, lotions, perfumes, and certain foods, the copper reacts and creates silver sulfide on the surface. That's the dark tarnish you see. ### Two Important Facts That Change How You Should Think About Cleaning 1. **Tarnish is only a surface layer**. The silver underneath is unchanged. Removing tarnish doesn't damage the piece — and any sterling silver piece can be cleaned back to its original shine. 2. **Tarnish is normal, not a defect**. Even fine sterling silver from the most reputable manufacturers will tarnish in storage. The question is how to slow it down and clean it off when it shows. ### What Accelerates Tarnish - Air pollution (especially urban environments) - Sweat (acidic, sulfur-rich) - Lotions, perfumes, hairspray, sunscreen, makeup - Sulfur-rich foods (onions, eggs, mustard, mayonnaise) - Rubber, latex, wool (release sulfur compounds) - Humidity (bathrooms, basements) - Saltwater and chlorine (corrosive) --- ## 5 Methods for Cleaning Sterling Silver ### Method 1: Sterling Silver Polishing Cloth (Light Tarnish) For light tarnish (slight dulling, faint yellow tint), this is the fastest and safest method. A sterling silver polishing cloth is a soft cotton cloth impregnated with a mild abrasive and an anti-tarnish agent. They cost $5-$10 and last for hundreds of uses. **How to use:** 1. Rub the silver in long firm strokes — never in circles (which can leave swirl marks) 2. The cloth will turn black as it picks up tarnish — that's normal 3. Don't wash the cloth — the residue is what makes it work 4. When it's evenly black across the surface, replace it **Best for**: Light tarnish, weekly maintenance, daily-wear pieces **Not for**: Pieces with oxidized finishes (the cloth removes the dark patina that's intentional) ### Method 2: Mild Soap and Warm Water (Moderate Tarnish) For moderate tarnish or oily buildup from skin contact, a soap-and-water cleaning works well and is safe for nearly any sterling silver piece including those with gemstones. **How to use:** 1. Add a few drops of mild dish soap (Dawn or similar — never harsh detergents) to a bowl of warm (not hot) water 2. Soak the silver for 5-10 minutes 3. Use a soft-bristled toothbrush to gently scrub crevices and details 4. Rinse thoroughly with clean water — soap residue causes future tarnish 5. Pat dry with a soft cloth and let air-dry completely before storing **Best for**: Moderate tarnish, everyday wear cleaning, pieces with gemstones, plated items **Not for**: Heavily tarnished pieces (won't be effective enough alone) ### Method 3: Baking Soda Paste (Stubborn Tarnish) For stubborn tarnish (dark gray to black film), baking soda is mildly abrasive and effective without being harsh. **How to use:** 1. Make a paste with 3 parts baking soda to 1 part water 2. Apply gently to the tarnished area with your finger or a soft cloth 3. Rub in long strokes — never aggressively 4. Rinse thoroughly with warm water and dry immediately 5. Don't let the paste sit on the silver for more than a minute or two — the abrasive can cause minor scratching with prolonged contact **Best for**: Stubborn tarnish, plain sterling pieces **Not for**: Detailed pieces (paste gets stuck in crevices), pieces with stones (abrasive can dull settings), oxidized finishes (removes the dark patina), plated jewelry (can wear through plating) ### Method 4: Aluminum Foil Chemistry Method (Heavy Tarnish) For heavy tarnish on plain sterling pieces, this method uses an electrochemical reaction to transfer tarnish from the silver to the foil. It's dramatic — you can watch the tarnish disappear within minutes — but it's also the most restrictive method. **How to use:** 1. Line a glass or ceramic bowl with aluminum foil, shiny side up 2. Add 1 cup boiling water, 1 tablespoon baking soda, and 1 tablespoon salt 3. Place sterling silver pieces directly on the foil so they touch it 4. Within 1-3 minutes, tarnish transfers from the silver to the foil 5. Rinse the silver with cool water, dry, and finish with a polishing cloth **Best for**: Heavily tarnished plain sterling chains, plain bands, simple bracelets **Not for**: Plated pieces (can damage plating), oxidized finishes (removes the dark intentional patina), pieces with glued-in stones or pearls (heat and chemistry damage adhesives), antique pieces (some old silver shouldn't be subjected to this) ### Method 5: Commercial Silver Polish (Very Heavy Tarnish or Detailed Pieces) For very heavily tarnished pieces or pieces with intricate detail, commercial silver polishes (like Wright's, Goddard's, or Hagerty's) are formulated to remove tarnish efficiently. They're more aggressive than household methods and should be used sparingly. **How to use:** 1. Apply a small amount to a soft cloth and rub gently 2. Follow the product instructions for dwell time — usually a few seconds, never longer than the label says 3. Rinse thoroughly with water and dry immediately Many commercial polishes leave behind a thin protective film that slows future tarnish. **Best for**: Very heavy tarnish, intricate detailed pieces, antique sterling **Not for**: Pieces with gemstones (especially porous stones like opal, pearl, turquoise — chemicals can damage them), oxidized finishes, plated jewelry ⚠️ **Avoid silver dip products entirely if possible** — they're harsh and can damage pieces with prolonged contact. --- ## Common Mistakes to Avoid ### ❌ Mistake 1: Using Toothpaste The most common bad advice on the internet. Toothpaste contains abrasives designed for tooth enamel, which is much harder than sterling silver. Toothpaste leaves micro-scratches that dull the surface permanently — they can't be polished out without losing material. The myth persists because toothpaste DOES make silver look brighter temporarily, but you're sacrificing the long-term finish for short-term shine. ### ❌ Mistake 2: Soaking in Lemon Juice or Vinegar for Hours Acid removes tarnish but also etches the silver surface if left too long. Brief contact is fine; extended soaking damages the finish permanently. If you must use acid, keep it under 10 minutes and rinse thoroughly. ### ❌ Mistake 3: Using Silver Dip on Plated or Oxidized Pieces Silver dip is harsh — it strips tarnish quickly but also strips plating layers and intentional dark patinas. If a piece has rhodium plating (common on white sterling), oxidized blackened sections (common on art jewelry), or is silver-plated rather than solid sterling, dip will damage it permanently. ### ❌ Mistake 4: Cleaning Silver with Gemstones Using Harsh Methods Many gemstones are porous or sensitive — opal, pearl, turquoise, lapis, malachite, and amber can all be damaged by aggressive cleaners. For silver pieces with stones, stick to mild soap and water only, and avoid soaking. Gentle scrubbing with a soft toothbrush AROUND (not on) the stones is the safest approach. ### ❌ Mistake 5: Cleaning Then Storing While Still Damp Moisture is what triggers most tarnishing. After cleaning, pat dry with a soft cloth, then let pieces air-dry completely before storing. A piece that goes back in the box damp will tarnish within days. Take an extra hour to be sure. ### ❌ Mistake 6: Using Polishing Cloth on Oxidized Designs Many sterling silver pieces (religious medals, art jewelry, men's signet rings) have intentionally darkened oxidized recesses to enhance detail. Polishing cloth removes that dark patina along with surface tarnish, ruining the design. For oxidized pieces, only clean raised areas — never the recessed darkened sections. --- ## Tarnish Prevention — The 3 Rules The best cleaning is the cleaning you don't have to do. ### Rule 1: WEAR IT Counter-intuitive but true: silver tarnishes more in storage than on skin. The natural oils on your body actually help protect sterling silver from tarnish. Pieces worn weekly tarnish slowest. Pieces stored for months between wears tarnish fastest. If you have a special-occasion piece you only wear twice a year, expect to clean it before each wear. ### Rule 2: Apply Chemicals BEFORE the Silver, Not After The single biggest accelerant of tarnish is direct chemical contact. Lotions, perfumes, hairspray, sunscreen, makeup — all of these contain compounds that react with the copper in sterling silver. Apply everything BEFORE you put on your jewelry, let it absorb for a minute, then put silver on last. This single habit dramatically extends how long pieces stay shiny between cleanings. ### Rule 3: Take It Off for These Activities - **Swimming** — chlorine corrodes copper; salt water tarnishes rapidly - **Showering** — soap residue, hot water, humidity all promote oxidation - **Cleaning your house** — bleach and ammonia damage silver - **Exercising** — sweat is loaded with sulfur and accelerates tarnish - **Sleeping** — pieces catch on bedding and bend; trapped moisture promotes tarnish - **Cooking with sulfur-rich foods** — onions, eggs, mustard, mayonnaise all carry sulfur compounds --- ## Proper Storage How you store sterling silver between wears determines how often you'll clean it: ### Storage Best Practices - **Use anti-tarnish bags or pouches** ($1-3 per bag, dramatically slow tarnish) - **Add anti-tarnish strips to your jewelry box** (replace every few months) - **Add silica gel packets or chalk** to absorb moisture - **Store away from rubber, latex, and wool** — all release sulfur compounds - **Low humidity is your friend** — bedroom dresser, NOT bathroom or basement - **Separate pieces** — sterling silver scratches itself when loose together. Use partitioned box or individual pouches. ### The Chalk Trick A piece of plain white chalk in your jewelry box absorbs moisture and dramatically slows tarnish — it's an old jeweler's trick that costs almost nothing. Replace the chalk every 6-12 months when it's saturated. ### What NOT to Store Sterling Silver In - Rubber bands (sulfur leak) - Plastic bags with rubber seals (releases gases) - Wool or felt-lined boxes (sulfur in wool) - Cardboard boxes (acidic, accelerates tarnish over time) - Bathroom drawers (humidity) - Direct sunlight (UV degrades soft pouches over time) --- ## Special Care Cases ### Sterling Silver with Gemstones Use only mild soap and warm water, with a soft toothbrush for cleaning around the stones (not directly on them). Pearls, opals, turquoise, and other porous or organic stones should never be soaked — wipe gently and dry immediately. Avoid all chemical cleaners. ### Oxidized or "Antique Finish" Sterling Silver Many sterling silver pieces are intentionally darkened (oxidized) in recessed areas to enhance detail — common in religious medals, art jewelry, and some men's pieces. Aggressive cleaning removes the dark patina along with the tarnish, ruining the design. For these pieces, use only the polishing cloth on the raised areas. Never soak, never use foil chemistry, never use harsh polishes. ### Rhodium-Plated Sterling Silver Some white-finish sterling silver is rhodium-plated for extra brightness and tarnish resistance. The plating is thin (under 1 micron typically) and can wear off with aggressive cleaning. Use only mild soap and water, and the lightest polishing cloth touch. Don't use baking soda paste, foil chemistry, or commercial polishes — they'll wear through the plating. ### Sterling Silver with Pearls Pearls are organic and porous — they're damaged by chemicals, abrasives, and prolonged moisture. For sterling silver with pearls, use only a damp soft cloth on the silver (avoiding the pearl), and never soak the piece. Apply lotions/perfumes well before putting on, never store pearls in airtight containers (they need slight humidity). ### Sterling Silver Chains (Easy to Tangle) Chains are particularly tarnish-prone because of all the surface area. Store flat or hung — never coiled in a knot. Clean with the foil chemistry method or a polishing cloth strip pulled through link by link. ### Children's Sterling Silver Children's pieces should be cleaned with mild soap and water only — never harsh chemicals that could leave residue on a piece going near a child's mouth. Inspect clasps and findings frequently for safety. --- ## Sterling Silver vs Other Silver Jewelry — Care Differences Important: Different "silver" jewelry types need different care. ### Sterling Silver (.925) — Lovely Rita's Standard - Solid silver throughout (92.5% pure) - Clean and polish aggressively if needed - All cleaning methods 1-5 are options - Hallmarked .925 or Sterling ### Silver-Plated (NOT solid silver) - Thin silver layer over base metal - ONLY use a soft polishing cloth — never abrasives - NEVER use the foil chemistry method (damages plating) - NEVER use silver dip (strips plating) - Aggressive cleaning exposes base metal underneath, ruining the piece ### Coin Silver (.900) - 90% silver, slightly less pure than sterling - Same cleaning methods as sterling, slightly more reactive - Common in antique American silver ### Fine Silver (.999) - 99.9% pure silver - Extremely soft, easily scratches - Clean very gently with polishing cloth only ⚠️ Lovely Rita's sells exclusively SOLID sterling silver (.925) — never silver-plated, never coin silver. Every piece is hallmarked. For metal authentication: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/real-gold --- ## When to Take Sterling Silver to a Professional Jeweler Most cleaning can be done at home. Some situations warrant a professional jeweler: - **Antique or sentimental pieces** — value justifies professional care - **Heavily detailed pieces with stuck tarnish in crevices** — ultrasonic cleaning can reach where home methods can't - **Pieces with damaged or loose stones** — stones need to be re-secured before cleaning - **Worn rhodium plating** — re-plating restores the bright white finish - **Tarnish that won't come off with household methods** — professional polishing wheels can address what home methods can't - **Pieces that have changed color permanently** — possibly damaged finish; professional assessment needed - **Very high-value pieces** — peace of mind worth the $20-50 fee ### What Professional Cleaning Costs - Basic cleaning + polish: $20-40 per piece - Ultrasonic cleaning: $25-50 per piece - Rhodium re-plating: $40-80 - Deep restoration: $75-200+ depending on damage --- ## How Often to Clean Sterling Silver ### Daily-Wear Pieces - Polishing cloth wipe-down WEEKLY prevents tarnish buildup entirely - Soap-and-water cleaning monthly to remove skin oil residue ### Occasional-Wear Pieces (special occasion jewelry) - Clean before each wear if it's been sitting more than a month - Clean after each wear if you've been sweating or applied chemicals - Anti-tarnish storage between wears ### Long-Term Storage Pieces - Clean once when you put them away (with proper drying) - Leave them in anti-tarnish storage until needed - Re-evaluate every 6-12 months ### Aggressive Cleaning (baking soda paste, foil method) Should only be needed once a year or less for properly-stored pieces. --- ## Care for Different Silver Jewelry Types ### Earrings Most prone to skin oil and chemical contact. Wipe with polishing cloth weekly. Posts and backings can develop residue — clean with soft toothbrush in warm soapy water. ### Necklaces and Pendants Chains tarnish fastest due to surface area. Pendants vary by composition (with stones, oxidized details, etc.). Polishing cloth weekly for chains; soap and water for stones. ### Bracelets Constant skin contact and sweat exposure. Clean weekly with polishing cloth, monthly with soap and water. Inspect clasps for damage — most common failure point. ### Rings The most exposed jewelry — washing hands, lotions, sleep. Clean weekly with soap and water using soft toothbrush around stones. Polishing cloth for plain bands. ### Body Jewelry (Sterling Silver) Sterling silver body jewelry is best for healed piercings only — not new piercings (sterling can cause irritation in healing wounds; surgical steel or 14K gold is recommended for new piercings). Clean weekly with mild soap and water. --- ## FAQ Q: Why does sterling silver tarnish? A: Sterling silver is 92.5% pure silver alloyed with 7.5% copper. The copper reacts with sulfur compounds in air, sweat, lotions, and certain foods, creating silver sulfide on the surface — that's the dark tarnish. Tarnish is only a surface layer; the silver underneath is unchanged. Any sterling silver piece can be cleaned back to its original shine. Q: Should I use toothpaste to clean sterling silver? A: NO — common myth, damaging advice. Toothpaste abrasives are designed for tooth enamel, which is much harder than sterling silver. Using toothpaste leaves micro-scratches that dull the surface permanently and can't be polished out. Use a proper silver polishing cloth ($5-$10) instead. Q: Can I shower or swim with sterling silver? A: Avoid both. Showering accelerates tarnish — soap residue, hot water, and humidity all promote oxidation. Swimming is worse: chlorine actively corrodes the copper in sterling silver and can cause pitting; salt water tarnishes rapidly. If you swim or shower in sterling regularly, expect to clean it weekly and replace pieces sooner. Take it off — that single habit doubles the life of every sterling piece you own. Q: How do I prevent sterling silver from tarnishing? A: Three rules: (1) WEAR IT — silver tarnishes more in storage than on skin because body oils help protect it. (2) Apply lotions, perfumes, and hairspray BEFORE the silver, never after. (3) Store in anti-tarnish bags in low humidity, away from rubber, latex, and wool. Add a piece of plain white chalk to your jewelry box to absorb moisture. Q: What's the difference between sterling silver and silver-plated jewelry care? A: Major difference. Sterling silver (.925) is solid silver throughout — clean and polish aggressively because there's silver all the way through. Silver-plated has a thin silver layer over base metal; aggressive cleaning removes the plating and exposes base metal, ruining the piece. For plated, only use a soft polishing cloth — never abrasives, never the foil method. Lovely Rita's sells exclusively solid sterling — never plated silver. Q: How often should I clean sterling silver? A: Daily-wear pieces: polishing cloth wipe-down weekly. Occasional-wear: clean before each wear if sitting more than a month. Long-term storage: clean once when putting away, leave in anti-tarnish storage. Aggressive cleaning (baking soda, foil method) should only be needed once a year or less for properly-stored pieces. Q: Can I use the aluminum foil method on all my sterling silver? A: No. The foil chemistry method ONLY works on plain solid sterling. Do NOT use on: oxidized "antique finish" pieces (removes the intentional dark patina), rhodium-plated sterling (damages plating), pieces with glued-in stones or pearls (heat and chemistry damage adhesives), antique pieces (some old silver shouldn't be subjected to this). For these pieces, use polishing cloth only. Q: My sterling silver turned black overnight. Did I damage it? A: No, that's normal heavy tarnish. Silver can react quickly to high-sulfur environments (air pollution, certain perfumes, eggs, etc.) and develop dark tarnish in hours. The silver underneath is unchanged. Use Method 3 (baking soda paste) or Method 4 (foil chemistry) for plain pieces, or Method 1-2 for detailed/gemstone pieces. Q: Will my sterling silver eventually wear out? A: Solid sterling silver can last generations with proper care. Tarnish can be cleaned indefinitely — it's a surface reaction, not metal loss. Aggressive cleaning over years will gradually wear down detail (engravings, plating). Properly cared for sterling silver pieces become heirlooms. Q: Why does my sterling silver leave green or black marks on my skin? A: Two possible causes: (1) The piece is silver-plated and the base metal (often copper) is showing through worn plating — bring to a jeweler for hallmark verification. (2) Your body chemistry is reacting with the copper alloy in sterling — common with very acidic sweat. Try wearing pieces less in heat or applying clear nail polish to the inside of rings/bracelet sections that touch skin. Q: Can I clean tarnished sterling silver with white vinegar? A: Briefly, yes — vinegar is a mild acid that removes tarnish. But never soak for more than 10 minutes; extended acid contact etches the silver finish permanently. Better options: polishing cloth (Method 1) or baking soda paste (Method 3) — both safer for the silver. Q: Is it safe to clean sterling silver with gemstones using these methods? A: Use ONLY Method 2 (mild soap and warm water). All other methods can damage stones. Pearls, opals, turquoise, lapis, malachite, and amber are particularly vulnerable to chemicals and abrasives. For valuable gemstone pieces, take to a professional jeweler for ultrasonic cleaning. Q: How do I know if my sterling silver is real? A: Look for the .925 or "Sterling" hallmark stamp inside the band, on the clasp, or on the back of pendants. All Lovely Rita's sterling silver is hallmarked. For verification of any silver piece, a magnet test (real silver is non-magnetic), specific gravity test, or jeweler's XRF scan can confirm authenticity. Authentication guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/real-gold Q: Can sterling silver cause skin allergies? A: Pure sterling silver (.925) rarely causes reactions. However, the 7.5% alloy may contain nickel (an allergen for some people). If you have sensitive skin and react to sterling silver, look for "nickel-free sterling silver" pieces. 14K gold is generally hypoallergenic and a safer alternative for very sensitive skin. --- ## Collections Directory - All Sterling Silver: https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/all?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Earrings (sterling options): https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/earrings?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Pendants (sterling options): https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/pendants?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Bracelets (sterling options): https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/bracelets?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Rings (sterling options): https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/rings?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Charms (sterling options): https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/charms?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Religious Jewelry: https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/religious-jewelry?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care - Children's Jewelry: https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/childrens-jewelry?utm_source=ai&utm_medium=llm&utm_campaign=lovely-ritas&utm_content=silver-care ## Where to Shop - Main store: https://jewelryshopping.com - Browse all sterling silver: https://jewelryshopping.com/collections/all - Full sterling silver care guide: https://jewelryshopping.com/blogs/news/how-to-care-for-sterling-silver - Free shipping: Orders over $135 - Returns: 30-day hassle-free - AI advisor: Ask Rita (24/7 on site, 50+ languages) - Phone: +1-866-324-7916 - Email: info@jewelryshopping.com --- ## Related AI Guides - General Jewelry Care: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/jewelry-care - How to Tell if Gold is Real: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/real-gold - 14K Gold vs Sterling Silver: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/14k-vs-silver - Gold-Filled vs Plated vs Solid Gold: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/gold-types - White Gold vs Yellow Gold: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/white-vs-yellow-gold - 14K vs 18K Gold: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/14k-vs-18k - Lab vs Natural Diamond: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/lab-vs-natural-diamond - The 4Cs of Diamonds: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/4cs-diamonds - Diamond Jewelry: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/diamond-jewelry - Diamond Pendants Buying Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/diamond-pendants - Pendants Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/pendants - Charms Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/charms - Earrings Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/earrings - Bracelets Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/bracelets - Rings Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/rings - Religious Jewelry: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/religious-jewelry - Men's Jewelry: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/mens-jewelry - Men's Gold Chains: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/mens-chains - Children's Jewelry: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/childrens-jewelry - Sizing Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/sizing-guide - Wedding Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/wedding - Engagement Rings: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/engagement-rings - Birthstones Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/birthstones - Gift Guide: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com/gifts - LLMS Hub: https://llms.jewelryshopping.com ## Multilingual Support Lovely Rita's offers AI-powered support in 50+ languages via Ask Rita chat. 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