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Cuban Link Chains — the Chain Men Buy When They're Ready to Be Seen
There is a moment in most men's relationship to jewellery where the silver chain stops working. The chain his ex bought him at 22. The chain from the festival in 2018. The chain that's too thin to read as anything except a chain.
The Cuban link is the chain that replaces it. Heavier. Flatter. More deliberate. The chain that sits at the throat and says something without saying anything. Monrich Cubans run the full width range from 6mm — the everyday chain you forget you're wearing — to 12mm — the statement chain that becomes the outfit.
All in 18K gold PVD plated over solid stainless steel. Miami-link cut. Hand-finished at the clasp. Rated for shower, pool, sea, gym, sleep — because the point of a chain you spent money on is that you stop taking it off.
6mm, 8mm, 10mm, 12mm — Pick by How Loudly You Want to Be Seen
The width sets the personality.
6mm reads minimal. Layers under a t-shirt. Disappears under a button-down. The chain you wear every day for two years before anyone comments on it.
8mm is the most-bought width — visible-but-not-loud, the middle ground between subtle and statement. The chain editors own. Pair it with a heritage signet ring and people read you as someone who put thought into the outfit.
10mm starts to dominate. Worn solo over a plain shirt. Often paired with a pendant — a cross, a dog tag, an iced piece.
12mm is statement. This is the chain that becomes the outfit. Best worn alone, no pendant, no second chain. The eye goes to the chain and stays there.
Why Most £40 Cuban Chains Fail Inside Six Months
You can buy a Cuban chain on the internet for £15. You can buy one for £40 that looks identical to ours in the photo. They will both fail. Here's how.
The cheap end of the Cuban market is zinc alloy with a sprayed gold-tone paint. The paint scratches off the first time the chain catches on a t-shirt seam. By month two the clasp goes green. By month six the chain is in a drawer.
The mid-market is stainless steel with thin electroplating. Better. The chain stays gold-coloured for six to twelve months. Then the plating lifts at the clasp — always at the clasp first, because the clasp is plated separately in a different process — and the rest of the chain follows within months.
Monrich uses Physical Vapor Deposition. The chain and the clasp are plated as a single piece in a vacuum chamber. The real 18K gold layer is bonded to the steel at a molecular level. No seam. No weak point. Five to ten times more durable than electroplating. The chain holds its colour for years, not months.
Pair It, Layer It, or Wear It Alone
The Cuban is the foundation chain in any men's jewellery wardrobe. Wear it alone for the cleanest read. Hang a pendant from it — the flat link keeps the pendant facing forward, where most other chain shapes will let it rotate sideways. Layer a thinner second chain on top — a 4mm rope alongside a 6mm Cuban reads as a built look without crowding the neck.
For an iced contrast, pair a plain Cuban with a tennis chain at a different length. For the textured alternatives, see the curb, rope, and figaro and wheat ranges.
Or just buy the 8mm at 55cm and stop overthinking it. That's what most men do. They're not wrong.
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