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How to Layer Gold Necklaces: The Simple 3-Chain Rule

Layered gold necklaces are the fastest way to make a plain outfit look considered. The trick is not owning more chains — it is spacing them correctly. Here is the three-chain rule we use on every ZAKO necklace stack.

1. Vary the length by at least 5 cm

Start with a choker or short chain (35–40 cm), add a mid-length pendant (45 cm), then finish with a longer chain (50–55 cm). If two chains sit within a couple of centimetres of each other they tangle and read as a mistake rather than a stack.

2. Vary the weight, not the colour

One chunky curb chain, one delicate cable chain, one chain with a small pendant. Mixing thicknesses creates depth. Mixing metal tones, on the other hand, is where most stacks fall apart — keep everything in the same gold tone and the layers look intentional.

3. Let one piece be the hero

A stack needs a focal point: a single pendant, a pearl, a small charm. Everything else supports it. Three chains with three pendants compete with each other and with your face.

4. Match the neckline

V-necks suit longer layers that echo the shape. Crew necks look best with a choker plus one mid-length chain. Off-shoulder tops are the one place a chunky chain can stand alone.

How to stop layered necklaces tangling

Fasten the longest chain first and the shortest last, and store each chain separately — a tangled stack is almost always a storage problem, not a design one.

Ready to build yours? Browse the necklace collection and start with two chains before you add a third.

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