Pretty sure the ones spending thousands on radiant apex mounts, don't have anyone to whom they could give the ring.Not for me and very over priced, imo. However, with the amount of money some spend in crowns it wouldn't surprise me if they've sold more than a few of these.Only a joke, I'm sure that's not true for everyone.
This was linked in my newsfeed https://gear.bethesda.net/products/ritual-of-mara-gold-ring
"The Elder Scrolls Ritual of Mara 10K Gold Ring is for all who believe in the Divine of Love. It carries a warm and soft yellow tone often used in historical old-world jewelry. This lighter color most accurately matches the original Elder Scrolls Online concept art found in-game."
I'm just wondering who would buy this for $1,000.00. There is merchandise from older games that do fetch eye-watering prices in todays market. Maybe this could be a good investment for the future given the popularity of the Elder Scrolls.
emilyhyoyeon wrote: »This is exactly the kind of TES merch that I like and want to see more of--something you would actually find in the world
At least the ring is a physical object that I could more than easily resell (and probably at a profit) after a while.
emilyhyoyeon wrote: »This is exactly the kind of TES merch that I like and want to see more of--something you would actually find in the world
I don't mind that at all, but that ring is just overpriced for its material and craftmanship.
Goregrinder wrote: »plus you're getting two bands in this package.
It's expensive for game merchandise, but I think you have to bear in mind this is an actual 10 karat gold ring, even if it was just a plain band it would cost at least a couple of hundred dollars and any kind of pattern is going to make it more expensive.
Add on the fact that they're playing up the romance aspect of it being ring of Mara and selling it in the run up to Valentine's Day, which means you can expect an arbitrary mark-up just for that. (If you don't believe me try searching for 'gold ring' vs. 'gold wedding ring', on average the second will get you higher prices for identical items.)
So I think it's expensive for game merchandise but for a gold ring the price doesn't surprise me. I wouldn't buy it myself, but I'm not a fan of gold jewellery (even my wedding ring is palladium and silver) or Mara. If they had a silver necklace with a symbol of Kynareth I might buy it, and then paying the kind of price I'd expect for a similarly design silver necklace which isn't game merchandise might actually be a good sign because it could imply it's well made, although I'd want to make sure that was the case first and it wasn't just a merchandise markup.
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Nord_Raseri wrote: »Goregrinder wrote: »plus you're getting two bands in this package.
Not package. Single ring.
Absolutely not.
I could imagine spending $1,000 on a ring. I mean, it's not in my budget right now, but if it were, it's not totally unreasonable. But that ring? No. For $1,000, I'd be looking for better quality, better design, and probably some gemstones.
I gave serious consideration to buying an amulet of Dibella that I saw somewhere... maybe on Etsy rather than official merchandise?... that looked way better than this and was maybe $200 or so? That's definitely the high end for what I'd pay for something like this.
I worked as a jeweler for many years, both in fabrication and sales. Back in the day when I would have had to carve this wax model by hand and then make a mold and cast it myself, $1000-1500 for a single ring in 20-24k gold (because 10k is budget material and you do not spend hundreds on a custom ring model and then use the cheapest garbage metal to make it) would be reasonable. Nowadays we don't have to carve wax models, we can do the modeling in 3d software and print out the blank to mold. So let's say, since Zenimax has constant access to 3d modelers, the ring production itself cost however many hours of wage that the artist put into it--I've seen people put out something like this in an afternoon. Then printing the model in X sizes, cost of printing plastic--negligible. Then sent to the casting company starting at about $25 for six rings of the same size and the more models you do at once the greater the discount so for an order the size I would hope to get I'd expect the casting cost to be negligible. Let's say this is a 10mm band overall and would weigh around 10 grams, estimating. That's 250 bucks of 10k gold. It could well be that artist salary + gold cost, x3 for standard retail markup might equal $1000, I have no idea how much they pay their artists hourly. But it sure seems an awful lot for a mass produced, 10k ring. If you're really, really struck by the romantic urge, I'd hold out to get someone else to do this for you in *good* gold.
Disclaimer: I'm not trying to totally badmouth 10k gold. I understand a lot of people cannot afford expensive jewelry and I know many people who are perfectly happy with the 10k wedding bands they bought as poor youths. It still looks good and it is more scratch-resistant than higher gold alloys. I just balk at the idea of using 10k gold for customs and selling it for high prices.
Goregrinder wrote: »I worked as a jeweler for many years, both in fabrication and sales. Back in the day when I would have had to carve this wax model by hand and then make a mold and cast it myself, $1000-1500 for a single ring in 20-24k gold (because 10k is budget material and you do not spend hundreds on a custom ring model and then use the cheapest garbage metal to make it) would be reasonable. Nowadays we don't have to carve wax models, we can do the modeling in 3d software and print out the blank to mold. So let's say, since Zenimax has constant access to 3d modelers, the ring production itself cost however many hours of wage that the artist put into it--I've seen people put out something like this in an afternoon. Then printing the model in X sizes, cost of printing plastic--negligible. Then sent to the casting company starting at about $25 for six rings of the same size and the more models you do at once the greater the discount so for an order the size I would hope to get I'd expect the casting cost to be negligible. Let's say this is a 10mm band overall and would weigh around 10 grams, estimating. That's 250 bucks of 10k gold. It could well be that artist salary + gold cost, x3 for standard retail markup might equal $1000, I have no idea how much they pay their artists hourly. But it sure seems an awful lot for a mass produced, 10k ring. If you're really, really struck by the romantic urge, I'd hold out to get someone else to do this for you in *good* gold.
Disclaimer: I'm not trying to totally badmouth 10k gold. I understand a lot of people cannot afford expensive jewelry and I know many people who are perfectly happy with the 10k wedding bands they bought as poor youths. It still looks good and it is more scratch-resistant than higher gold alloys. I just balk at the idea of using 10k gold for customs and selling it for high prices.
But does this count as a custom? This seems more like a limited run set to me. And is your $250 ballpark the cost to make each ring, or what you would sell it for if you made batch of these after you added your markup?
Goregrinder wrote: »I worked as a jeweler for many years, both in fabrication and sales. Back in the day when I would have had to carve this wax model by hand and then make a mold and cast it myself, $1000-1500 for a single ring in 20-24k gold (because 10k is budget material and you do not spend hundreds on a custom ring model and then use the cheapest garbage metal to make it) would be reasonable. Nowadays we don't have to carve wax models, we can do the modeling in 3d software and print out the blank to mold. So let's say, since Zenimax has constant access to 3d modelers, the ring production itself cost however many hours of wage that the artist put into it--I've seen people put out something like this in an afternoon. Then printing the model in X sizes, cost of printing plastic--negligible. Then sent to the casting company starting at about $25 for six rings of the same size and the more models you do at once the greater the discount so for an order the size I would hope to get I'd expect the casting cost to be negligible. Let's say this is a 10mm band overall and would weigh around 10 grams, estimating. That's 250 bucks of 10k gold. It could well be that artist salary + gold cost, x3 for standard retail markup might equal $1000, I have no idea how much they pay their artists hourly. But it sure seems an awful lot for a mass produced, 10k ring. If you're really, really struck by the romantic urge, I'd hold out to get someone else to do this for you in *good* gold.
Disclaimer: I'm not trying to totally badmouth 10k gold. I understand a lot of people cannot afford expensive jewelry and I know many people who are perfectly happy with the 10k wedding bands they bought as poor youths. It still looks good and it is more scratch-resistant than higher gold alloys. I just balk at the idea of using 10k gold for customs and selling it for high prices.
But does this count as a custom? This seems more like a limited run set to me. And is your $250 ballpark the cost to make each ring, or what you would sell it for if you made batch of these after you added your markup?
$250 is the cost of 10 grams of 10k gold right now, just the metal itself*, and is about the maximum you could sell the ring for at a jewelry shop if you needed to hock it later. Gold prices never reflect design, unless the design is unique and a shop thinks they can flip it.
*not counting any wholesale bargain a manufacturer might get.
The price is entirely typical for not trash-made tie in jewellery. Tie in jewellery and items from video games, movies, tv shows, etc, with a vague bit of quality attached (i.e. not like brass 'n stuff you'd still over pay for) all are priced like this because you're not just going down to the jewellers and getting a ring/necklace/etc, you're getting something that is literally merchandise.
Is it not worth the money? Absolutely. Is it also an "absurd cash grab" people should slam Bethesda for? Absolutely not. It's pretty bog standard pricing.
Someone previously mentioned the One Ring. You can drop anywhere from a hundo up to $4500 for the One Ring. FOUR AND A HALF K. Not to mention all the other expensive versions of that. But when it comes down to it, it's just book/movie merch. And people will pay that for it.