We made a commitment to each other – that we would make the other’s happiness our own, without forgetting our own individual hopes and dreams.
I made a commitment to my family, and to carrying on family traditions. My father’s parents were married for 70 years. They grew up in a small town in upstate Pennsylvania, and when my grandfather went off to medical school at the University of Michigan, his parents forbade him to marry until he finished school.
My commitment was to my best friend, eating partner, hiking buddy, and wife and life companion, Robyn.
The rings represent my commitment to myself, to my immediate and extended family, and to my career. They remind me that my own well-being and good health are essential to a thriving and fulfilling family life and career, and they are a symbol of my commitment to the personal growth of everyone I love and hold dear.
We committed to each other and to being a family.Our lives at this point involved quite a few changes: finishing college, starting careers, building a living environment. Many of these big questions were starting to settle and we began looking out over a vast sea of possibility. I don’t think we knew exactly where we were going, but we knew who we absolutely couldn’t go there without. I think commitment is a continuum more than an event.
Healing and a new beginning.
Enormous stress and a broken marriage.
Purity of lines. Strong, yet soft. It reflected Claudia’s superb aesthetic and also reminded me of the Art Deco Modernists that I love so much. Confident. Bold. Feminine.
We made a commitment to a lifelong journey together as husband and wife. Our wedding was not to mark the start of a relationship but to recognize a bond that already existed.
I committed to following my dream of having my own creative business, to continued personal growth and connecting to others.
Our Four Curve Men’s Ring was customized for this couple incorporating meaningful elements by adding sapphires for the groom and diamonds from her grandmother.