Pinky ring
A pinky ring is any
Professional rings
A variety of pinky rings are awarded to graduating engineering students in North America, generally intended to serve as a reminder of the significance and impact of their chosen profession. In Canada, these include the Iron Ring, made of either crudely worked iron or stainless steel and worn on the dominant hand, presented to engineering students during the Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer,[1] and the silver, but otherwise similar, Earth Ring associated with the geologists and geophysicists of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta.[2] In the United States, the Engineer's Ring, awarded by the Order of the Engineer, is similar to the Canadian Iron Ring.[3]
In Canada, students who graduate in good standing from accredited forestry programs traditionally receive a silver ring from the Canadian Institute of Forestry."Silver Ring Program". Canadian Institute of Forestry.
Human ecology and home economics graduates also receive a pinky ring symbolizing their profession. The Human Ecology Ring was first instigated by a group of young graduates at
Indications of affiliation or conveying messages
At times, pinky rings have been worn with the intent to convey a message or indicate affiliation. During the Victorian era, both single men and women uninterested in pursuing marriage could wear a ring on the little finger of their left hand.[5]
Especially in the United States, pinky rings also developed an association with criminal activity.
Fashion
The more modern use of the pinky ring has weakened its traditional historic symbolism.[10][11] In the early 20th century, these rings were popular in Parisian fashion,[12] especially among the youth.[13] In the United States, such rings have become a "fundamental of American style", in some way due to its symbolic past.[14]
Signet and wedding rings
Pliny the Elder noted, according to the 1938 Loeb Classical Library translation by Harris Rackham, "Some people put all their rings on their little finger only, while others wear only one ring even on that finger, and use it to seal up their signet ring, which is kept stored away as a rarity not deserving the insult of common use, and is brought out from its cabinet as from a sanctuary; thus even wearing a single ring on the little finger may advertise the possession of a costlier piece of apparatus put away in store."[15]
Some British men wear a
In common with many American families, in homage to the British tradition, President Franklin D. Roosevelt wore a signet ring handed down to him by his father James, and which was inherited by FDR's son James Roosevelt. All three generations wore the signet on top of their wedding bands, on their left pinkies.[17] FDR's pinky signet was noted and admired by Sir Winston Churchill (who wore his own gold signet on a different finger).[18]
Wedding bands (always a gift from wife to husband) were usually worn by Western men in the Victorian age on the left hand pinky finger,[19] although few British men wore wedding rings until World War II.[16] Because of masculine limitations, men were encouraged to wear a second ring if they desired, but it was to be worn on top of the wedding band so as to keep both rings confined to one finger.[20] It appears the custom for men to wear their two rings on the left pinky was purely British and German; in America, men either followed the British tradition or wore no ring at all until much later.[when?][21]
Use in the British Royal Family
The use of the left-hand pinky finger as the wedding ring and royal signet or initial ring of the
References
- ISBN 978-0072868906.
- ^ Erdmer P, Krebes ES. "The Earth Science Ring: Made in Alberta". Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
- ISBN 978-0824782085.
- ^ "What is the Human Ecology Ring?". Manitoba Association of Home Economists (MAHE).
- ISBN 978-0618746583.
- ISBN 978-0415371827.
- ISBN 978-1596914537.
- ISBN 978-0061429859.
- ISBN 978-0415882934.
- ISBN 978-1560253778.
- ISBN 978-0253204974.
- ^ Archer IM. (1919). "Some Paris Suggestions in Jewelry Novelties for the Coming Winter". The Jewelers' Circular. 79 (8): 67.
- ^ Archer IM. (1920). "The New Jewelry Styles Seen in Paris". The Jewelers' Circular. 81 (6): 67.
- ^ Rosenzweig I. (2000). "Ba-Da-Bing! Thumbs Up for the Pinkie Ring". The New York Times. Retrieved October 15, 2012.
- ^ Harris Rackham (1938). "Pliny The Elder, Natural History". Loeb Classical Library.
- ^ a b Wheeler, Brian (January 8, 2014). "Why do British prime ministers never wear wedding rings?". BBC News.
- ^ MacGregor Burns, James (1956). Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox. The Easton Press.
- ISBN 9780375505003.
- ^ Jones, Sir William (1890). Finger Ring Lore.
- ^ McCarthy, James Remington (1945). Rings Throughout the Ages.
- ^ Kunz, George Frederick (1911). Rings for the Finger.
- ^ Longford, Elizabeth (1973). Victoria R.I. Harper & Row.
- ISBN 9780312043377.
- ^ Marshall, Dorothy (1972). Life and Times of Victoria. Praeger Publishers.
- ISBN 9780297766957.
- ^ Longford, Elizabeth (1973). Victoria R.I. Harper & Row.
- ISBN 9780771043758.
- ^ Dimbley, Jonathan (1994). The Prince of Wales. Little, Brown and Co.