How To Care For Your Gold Wedding Ring in the NZ Climate

How To Care For Your Gold Wedding Ring in the NZ Climate

How to Care for Your Gold Jewellery: A NZ Climate Guide

Gold is remarkably durable; it doesn't rust, tarnish, or corrode the way other metals do. But that doesn't mean it's indestructible. If you wear your ring every day, it will encounter sunscreen, salt air, hot pools, and garden soil before the week is out. A little know-how goes a long way toward keeping it looking its best for decades.

This guide is written with New Zealand life in mind because caring for jewellery in a coastal, outdoor-loving country comes with its own particular considerations. Good Gold rings are guaranteed for life (and beyond) but this guide covers all gold jewellery, including rings with stones. Also, if you wear your ring surfing, you will probably lose it (we get this email almost weekly), cold water = shrinking fingers = lost rings.

The Basics: Everyday Wear

Gold jewellery is made to be worn, and there's no need to be precious about it. That said, a few simple habits will protect both the metal and any stones set into it.

Take your ring off for:

  • Heavy gardening or manual work (soil and grit act as an abrasive)
  • Applying hand cream, sunscreen, or perfume (residue builds up in settings and dulls the surface)
  • Cleaning with household chemicals, particularly bleach or chlorine-based products, these can cause tarnishing
  • Rock climbing, weight training, or anything that puts sharp lateral force on the band

You don't need to remove your ring every time you wash your hands. Mild soap and water won't harm gold. Just make sure you rinse thoroughly, soap residue is one of the most common causes of a dull-looking ring. We also repair a lot of rings damaged at the gym. I've flattened my own ring lifting weights, I've also pinched my fi

NZ-Specific Considerations

Salt Air and Coastal Living

New Zealand's coastline is stunning, and many of us live close to it. Salt air is generally fine for gold itself, but it can accelerate wear on the microscopic surface of polished metal over time, and it isn't kind to certain gemstone settings. If you live near the coast, a quick rinse and dry after beach days is a good habit. And again, you will most likely lose your ring if you wear it surfing. 

Hot Pools and Thermal Spas

This one matters. The geothermal pools New Zealand is famous for contain sulphur compounds and elevated mineral levels that can react with low-karat gold alloys causing tarnish.

Gardening

New Zealand's gardening culture is real, and so is the damage garden soil can do to jewellery. Grit and small stones are abrasive enough to scratch gold, and the combination of moisture and organic matter can work its way into settings and behind stones. Keep a small dish near the back door and make leaving your ring there a habit.

Cleaning Your Gold Jewellery at Home

You don't need specialist products. A simple home clean every few weeks will keep your jewellery looking fresh.

What you'll need:
A small bowl of warm (not hot) water
A few drops of mild dish soap
A very soft toothbrush — the softer the better
A lint-free cloth

How to do it:

1. Mix the warm water and a small amount of dish soap in the bowl.
2. Place your jewellery in the bowl and let it soak for five to ten minutes.
3. Use the soft toothbrush to gently work around any settings, under stones, and along the inside of the band where skin oils collect.
4. Rinse thoroughly under clean running water, hold the plug or use a small sieve if you're near a drain.
5. Pat dry with the lint-free cloth and leave to air-dry fully before storing.

That's it. No ultrasonic cleaners, no harsh chemicals, no jewellery dips that promise miracles. Gentle and consistent beats aggressive and occasional every time.

Matte vs Polished Finishes: Different Care Needs

The finish on your ring affects how you should care for it — and what to expect as it ages.

Polished gold develops a patina of fine surface scratches with daily wear. This is normal and, to many people, part of the charm. A professional re-polish can restore the mirror finish when you want it. At home, avoid wiping a polished ring with rough cloths or paper towels — these leave fine scratches that dull the surface faster than wear alone.

Matte or brushed finishes are more delicate in one specific way: they can be accidentally polished back to a shine by abrasion. Rubbing a matte ring against other jewellery, hard surfaces, or even a polishing cloth will gradually remove the texture. Store matte-finish pieces separately, and be aware that a professional jeweller will need to re-apply the finish if it wears away in patches.

Both finishes are equally durable in terms of the gold itself — the difference is purely about surface texture and how it changes over time. We will provide a care kit with every purchase that contains the correct clothes and polishing rubbers to use with either your matte or polished ring.

What Actually Damages Gold

A few things worth knowing:

  • Chlorine and bleach are the most damaging common household chemicals. Prolonged exposure can cause gold alloys to become brittle and to tarnish.
  • Hard impacts won't shatter gold rings, but they can bend a band, loosen a stone setting, or crack a channel setting. If your ring takes a knock, check the setting and solder join before wearing it further.
  • Gold is relatively soft, and storing rings loose together with other jewellery means they scratch each other. A soft pouch or a ring box with individual slots is worth using.

When to See a Jeweller

Home cleaning keeps things looking good day to day, but some things need a professional hand.

Consider booking in when:

  • The surface has developed scratches you'd like removed (re-polish)
  • A matte finish has worn unevenly and needs refreshing
  • A stone looks loose or you can hear it moving when you tap the ring
  • The ring no longer fits well — fingers change with age, temperature, and life events
  • You develop a crack along the solder join

We are always happy to clean up your rings for you if the provided care kit isn't able to get rid of deeper scratches. 

Storing Your Jewellery

When you're not wearing your gold jewellery, store it somewhere dry, away from direct sunlight, and separate from other pieces. A fabric-lined box or individual soft pouches work well. Avoid leaving jewellery on bathroom surfaces where it's exposed to humidity and product residue. Lower carat rings can tarnish if left unworn, but the care kit will sort that out.

A Ring That Lasts a Lifetime

Gold jewellery, properly cared for, genuinely does last a lifetime and beyond. The alluvial gold rings we make at Good Gold are crafted to be worn every day, in real New Zealand life. That means beaches, gardens, kitchens, but never, ever while surfing :)

With a little care and the occasional professional refresh, your ring will look as good in thirty years as it does today.