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22 Carat Gold Single Bangle | Daily Wear | Size 2.4

Your Complete Guide to Buying 22ct Gold Bangles

Gold bangles are one of the most culturally specific purchases in South Asian jewellery — the sizing, the weight, the tradition around when they are given and who gives them all matter. This guide answers the questions most sellers do not address.

How to Measure Your Bangle Size — The Right Way

Bangle sizes in the UK South Asian tradition use a fractional system based on the inner diameter in inches — 2/4, 2/6, 2/8, 2/10, and so on. The number refers to the inner circumference of the bangle. Getting this wrong is the most common reason people return bangles.

Step-by-Step: How to Measure Your Bangle Size at Home

  • Adım 1: Hold your dominant hand with fingers together and thumb tucked in — this is the position you use to slide a bangle on.
  • Adım 2: Measure the widest part of your hand in this position using a tape measure. This is the minimum inner diameter the bangle must be.
  • Adım 3: Convert to the Indian bangle size: 2/4 = approx 6cm diameter; 2/6 = approx 6.5cm; 2/8 = approx 7cm; 2/10 = approx 7.5cm; 2/12 = approx 8cm.
  • Step 4: If you are between sizes, go up. A bangle that is slightly loose is more comfortable than one that is tight. Bangles worn in a stack move around naturally — a little room is correct.
  • Not sure? Visit our Green Street showroom and we will measure your wrist properly. We also offer exchanges on bangle sizes within 30 days of purchase.

22ct Gold Bangle Weight — What to Expect

The weight of a bangle tells you how much gold is in it — and how it will feel when worn. Light bangles sit almost unnoticed; heavy occasion bangles make a presence. Here is what the weight ranges mean in practice:

CategoryTypical Weight (Per Bangle)Price Range (Per Bangle)İçin En İyisi
Hafif4 – 8gFrom ~£160Daily wear, stacking, gifting
Mid-weight9 – 16g~£380 – £680Regular / occasional wear, sets
Occasion / Wedding17 – 35g+~£720 – £2,200+Shaadi, mehndi, bridal sets
Erkek Kada12 – 40gFrom ~£500Daily wear, wedding, identity

Traditional Kangan & Wedding Bangles

The role of gold bangles at a South Asian wedding is more significant than almost any other piece of jewellery — they are part of the bride’s identity on the day, and they are kept for life.

Kangan — the Bridal Bangles

Gold kangan are gifted to the bride by her family before the wedding — often during the chooda ceremony. At a traditional Hindu wedding, the bride wears gold bangles on both wrists as part of the solah shringar (sixteen adornments of a bride). Heavier, intricately worked kangan sets are common — 20–35g per bangle.

Gold Bangles as Mahr

At a nikah, gold jewellery — including bangles — may form part of the mahr (gift from the groom). Gold bangles are also gifted at the Mehndi night by the bride’s family and friends. Pakistani and Bangladeshi bridal sets typically include multiple gold bangles worn together as a set.

Shakha Pola & Gold Kangan

In Bengali tradition, the bride wears shakha (white conch shell bangles) and pola (red coral bangles) alongside gold. Gold kangan are gifted by the groom’s family (the tatwa) and are worn on the right wrist. These are kept for life as a symbol of married status.

Gold Kada — Religious & Cultural

The kada is one of the Five Ks of Sikhism — worn as a symbol of unbreakable commitment. Gold kadas are gifted at weddings, naming ceremonies (naam karan), and milestone birthdays. At PureJewels, our men’s gold kadas range from 12–40g in plain and engraved finishes.

Stacking Gold Bangles — A Practical Style Guide

Plain vs Patterned Bangles — Which Is Better?

There is no single answer — it depends on how you plan to wear them. Plain polished bangles stack cleanly and quietly, making a uniform gleaming line. Patterned bangles (twisted, engraved, or textured) catch the light differently and create more visual interest with fewer pieces. Most experienced wearers mix one or two patterned bangles into a plain stack for this reason.

Stacking Guide — What Works
  • Daily wear stack (3–5 bangles): Lightweight plain bangles, 4–8g each. Keep all the same size for a flush fit. Mix finishes — satin and polished — for subtle variation without visual noise.
  • Occasion stack (7–11 bangles): Build outward from plain bangles at the wrist to patterned or stone-set pieces at the outer edge. This is the traditional South Asian approach — plain inside, decorative outside.
  • Full bridal stack (15–21 bangles): Traditional bridal looks use bangles from wrist to elbow. For this, all bangles must be the same size. Lighter bangles (5–7g each) are more practical for a full stack — the total weight adds up quickly.
  • Mixing metals: Traditional style keeps all bangles in the same metal. Contemporary styling allows one or two rose gold bangles within a yellow gold stack — but avoid mixing 22ct and cheaper gold plated pieces as the colour difference will be visible.
  • Sound: Gold bangles are meant to make a sound. A slight clink is part of their identity — particularly in cultures where the sound of bangles signals the arrival of a married woman. If you dislike the sound, opt for a single heavier bangle rather than a stack.

What People Are Searching For — Regional Names

Gold bangles are known across UK communities as:
  • Kangan Hindi / Punjabi
  • Churi Hindi / Urdu / Pakistani
  • Kada Punjabi — rigid wide bangle
  • Valayal Tamil
  • Bangdi Gujarati / Marathi
  • Bala Bengali
  • Pola Bengali — bridal bangle
  • Sakha Bengali — conch bangle equivalent in gold
  • Shakha bangle UK
  • 22ct gold churi UK
  • Asian gold kangan UK
  • Indian wedding bangles UK
  • Gold kangan set UK
  • Bridal bangles London

Sıkça Sorulan Sorular

Hold your hand with fingers together and thumb tucked in — this is how you slide a bangle on. Measure the widest part of your hand in this position. Convert to the Indian size system: approx 6cm diameter = 2/4; 6.5cm = 2/6; 7cm = 2/8; 7.5cm = 2/10. If you are between sizes, always go up. Bangles should slide on and off comfortably when your hand is in the thumb-tucked position, but should not fall off when your hand is relaxed flat.

For comfortable daily wear, look for bangles in the 4–8g range. This weight is substantial enough to feel real and make a small sound when moving, but light enough to wear through a full working day without noticing them. Heavier bangles (12g+) are better suited for occasions when you are sitting down and not doing physical work. If you are new to wearing bangles, start with a single 5–6g piece and build from there.

There is no fixed number — but cultural and practical conventions exist. For daily wear, 3–5 bangles on one wrist is common across most South Asian traditions. For occasions, 7–11. For a full bridal look, 15–21. The most important factor is that all bangles are the same size — a mismatched bangle will slide and catch. In some communities, odd numbers are preferred; in others, even numbers. Follow your own family tradition.

Yes — 22ct gold (916 purity) is the traditional choice for South Asian bridal jewellery, and has been for generations. Its deep yellow colour and high purity make it the most culturally significant gold for weddings. The only consideration is weight — bridal bangles for an all-day wedding should be comfortable. We recommend 12–20g per bangle for a full day’s wear. Heavier pieces can be reserved for the ceremony itself. Our bridal jewellery advisors can help you select a set that works for your specific occasion.

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