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Waterproof Chains — the Chain That Lives on Your Neck for Years
Most men have owned three chains. Most men have watched three chains fade.
The first chain — the cheap one from the festival, the one a friend gave him at 19 — turned green at the clasp inside six months. The second chain — the mid-market one he bought at 24 because he was over the cheap one — held colour for eighteen months and then lifted at the same clasp edge. The third chain — the one he spent more on, the one he thought would last — lasted three years before the gold layer started showing the steel underneath at the contact points.
Then he stopped buying chains and went a couple of years without one.
The Monrich waterproof chain is the chain that ends the cycle. 18K gold PVD bonded molecularly to surgical-grade stainless steel — the same plating chemistry that protects medical implants from corrosion inside the human body. The gold layer is five to ten times more durable than standard electroplating. The clasp is the same material as the chain, plated as part of the same process. The chain that fails at the clasp first does so because the clasp was plated separately. This one isn't.
Cuban, Curb, Rope, Figaro, Tennis — Every Cut, All Waterproof
Every chain cut Monrich sells is in the waterproof range. There's no separate quality tier for waterproof and non-waterproof — every chain in the gold catalogue uses the same PVD plating standard.
Cuban — the flat interlocked statement chain. 6mm to 12mm widths. Curb — twisted oval link, the classic everyday cut. 4mm to 10mm. Rope — woven spiral, softer drape, more textured. 4mm to 8mm. Figaro and wheat — Italian heritage patterns, slightly more decorative than Cuban or curb. Tennis — continuous cubic zirconia stones across the length, iced statement.
The clasp on every chain matches the chain in PVD finish. No tonal drift, no plating seam, no weak point.
Why Most Waterproof Chains Aren't, Really
The men's chain market is full of waterproof claims that don't survive a week of real wear.
The clue is usually the price. A genuine waterproof chain — PVD-plated over solid stainless, with the clasp plated in the same run — costs £40 minimum in materials and labour. Anything sold below £25 as waterproof is either electroplated steel (lasts six months) or zinc alloy with sprayed paint (lasts three weeks). The seller is hoping you won't be wearing it long enough to find out.
The second clue is the clasp. On most cheap chains, the clasp is plated separately, in a different process, often by a different supplier. Water gets in at the seam between the chain and the clasp. The plating lifts at the clasp first — always at the clasp first — and the rest of the chain follows within months.
Monrich plates the clasp as part of the same PVD run on the same metal. No seam. No weak point. The chain holds its colour for years rather than months.
Pair It With a Pendant, Stack Two Chains, or Wear It Solo
The waterproof chain is the foundation chain. Hang a cross pendant, dog tag, or personalised name plate from it — the pendant ships with a matching PVD-plated chain so the tones lock from day one.
Layer two chains at different lengths for the built look — a 6mm Cuban at 55cm with a 4mm rope at 50cm, both gold tone. The 5cm offset prevents the chains from tangling.
Pair the chain with a matching waterproof bracelet at the wrist or a waterproof ring on the finger for a full waterproof stack — same finish, same plating standard, same shower-to-bed durability end to end.
Or just buy the 6mm Cuban at 55cm and stop looking. That's what most men do. The chain lives on the neck for the next four or five years.
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