Sizing Guide

Sizing Guide

Every ring is listed in its US size — here's how to find yours so you know it fits before it ships.

Measure a ring you own

Take a ring that fits the right finger and measure straight across the inside — the diameter — in millimeters. Match it to the chart below.

Wrap method

Wrap a strip of paper or string around the base of your finger, mark where it overlaps, lay it flat, and measure the length. That's your circumference — match it to the chart.

No tape measure? Print our ring sizer (PDF) — set your printer to 100% and size a ring you own at home.

Tips

  • Measure at the end of the day, when your hands are warmest — fingers shrink in the cold.
  • A wide band fits tighter than a thin one — size up a half for wide pieces.
  • Your dominant hand usually runs a touch larger.
  • Make sure the ring clears your knuckle — it's often the widest point of the finger.
  • Made-to-order pieces can be built to your exact size — just ask.
US SizeInside ØCircumference
414.9 mm46.8 mm
4.515.3 mm48.0 mm
515.7 mm49.3 mm
5.516.1 mm50.6 mm
616.5 mm51.9 mm
6.516.9 mm53.1 mm
717.3 mm54.4 mm
7.517.7 mm55.7 mm
818.1 mm57.0 mm
8.518.5 mm58.3 mm
919.0 mm59.5 mm
9.519.4 mm60.8 mm
1019.8 mm62.1 mm
10.520.2 mm63.4 mm
1120.6 mm64.6 mm
11.521.0 mm65.9 mm
1221.4 mm67.2 mm
12.521.8 mm68.5 mm
1322.2 mm69.7 mm

Our bracelets come in two styles, sized a little differently — open-backed cuffs you shape to your wrist, and clasped bracelets (link, chain, ID) that fit by length. Start by measuring your wrist, then read the section for your piece.

Measure your wrist

Wrap a flexible tape (or a strip of paper) snugly around your wrist, just below the wrist bone toward your hand — that's where a bracelet sits. Note the measurement; that's your wrist circumference and the starting point for either style.

Clasped bracelets (link, chain & ID)

These fit by length. Take your wrist measurement and add a little room so the bracelet moves freely without sliding over your hand:

  • Snug — add about ½" (1.5 cm)
  • Comfortable (most people) — add about ¾"–1" (2–2.5 cm)
  • Relaxed — add about 1¼" (3 cm)

That total is the length to look for. A good fit slides a little on the wrist but won't pull over the wide part of your hand. Between sizes or need a fixed-length piece adjusted? Reach out — we can often add or remove links or chain.

Cuffs

Cuffs are open-backed and made to be adjusted. A cuff's size is its inside length plus the open gap at the back. The metal should wrap your wrist with the gap resting underneath — snug, but easy to slide on and off over the wrist bone.

Adjusting a cuff

Sterling can be gently shaped. To tighten, hold both ends and squeeze them toward each other a little at a time; to loosen, ease them apart the same way — slow and even, never one hard bend. Make small adjustments only; over-flexing fatigues the metal. Not sure? Reach out before forcing it — we're glad to help.

Chain length comes down to where you want the piece to sit. A pendant adds a little drop below these.

  • 14" — sits snug as a choker, at the base of the neck
  • 16" — right at the collarbone
  • 18" — just below the collarbone
  • 20" — a couple inches lower, top of the chest
  • 22–24" — mid-chest, nice over a shirt
  • 30"+ — long, falls below the sternum

To check: cut a string to length, hold it at your neck in the mirror, and see where it lands — or measure a necklace you already wear.

Bolo ties adjust by design — the slide moves along the cord, so one bolo fits nearly anyone. The numbers that matter are the cord length and the size of the slide itself, both listed on each product page.

How to wear it

  • Snug to the collar — the traditional look, worn with a buttoned shirt.
  • Relaxed — slide dropped to mid-chest, over a tee or an open collar.

A longer cord gives more drop below the slide when worn loose, and the tips hang lower the further you slide it down.

Belt fit comes down to one measurement: the working length of a belt you already wear.

How to measure

Lay a favorite belt flat and measure from where the strap meets the buckle to the hole you actually use. Match that to the length listed on the product page — that working length is how belts are sized, not the strap end to end.

Standalone buckles list the strap width they take — check it against the belt you plan to pair them with.

Still having trouble? We're here to help — email info@thecommon.co.