Pictured: Double Layered Beaded Diamond Necklace
PAVOI proved that gold-look jewelry doesn't need a luxury price — but its pieces are typically thin gold plating over brass or vermeil over silver, which limits how long they survive daily wear. If you're replacing a PAVOI piece that faded, the fix isn't spending more on the same construction. It's changing the base metal.
Why Affordable Gold Jewelry Fades
At the accessible price point, nearly every brand uses the same recipe: a thin electroplated gold layer over a cheap reactive base. The gold layer is real; the problem is what's underneath. When plating thins at friction points — clasp, chain ends, ring edges — brass meets skin, and you get dulling and discoloration. Vermeil (gold over silver) does better, but the silver underneath still tarnishes when the layer wears through.
Same Budget, Different Construction
| Construction | Typical Price | Daily-Wear Lifespan |
|---|---|---|
| Gold plated over brass | $15–$40 | Months |
| Gold vermeil (over silver) | $30–$70 | 1–3 years, kept dry |
| 18k plating over stainless steel | $30–$60 | Years — water and sweat safe |
| Solid 14k gold | $200+ | Lifetime |
The middle rows are the same money. The difference is that a non-reactive stainless core keeps a piece wearable even as surface plating ages — no green marks, no tarnish creep from underneath.
What to Replace First
Upgrade the pieces that touch skin constantly and get wet most: everyday chain, huggies or studs that never come out, and stacking rings. Occasional statement pieces can stay budget plating — they don't accumulate the wear hours that destroy it.
What to Do With All This
It's why every Ezra Gems piece starts with a surgical-grade stainless steel core — waterproof, hypoallergenic, and tarnish-free by construction, not by care routine. Same accessible price range, different foundation — start with everyday gold and bestsellers. Shop Ezra Gems.
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