Searching tips:
Try the obvious first. If you're looking for information on Scottish Clan Crest Rings, enter "Crest Rings" rather than "Jewelry".
Use words likely to appear on a site with the information you want. "Scottish Crest Ring" gets better results than "really nice cheap Scottish or Celtic white gold ring for my uncle".
Make keywords as specific as possible. "MacLaren Crest Ring" gets more relevant results than "crest ring of my Scottish clan".
By default, our serch only returns pages that include all of your search terms. There is no need to include "and" between terms (as "Scottish and Clan").
Most searches ignore common words and characters such as "where" and "how", as well as certain single digits and single letters, because they tend to slow down your search without improving the results. No needs to type "where to find Scottish Clan Jewelry", but rather "Scottish Clan Jewelry" only.
Most searches are NOT case sensitive. All letters, regardless of how you type them, will be understood as lower case. For example, searches for "Scottish Jewelry", "scottish jewelry", and "sCOTtisH jEwElRy" will all return the same results.
In most cases searching for "Scottish Clan Ring" will not yield "Scottish Clan Rings" or "Scottish Clans Rings". If in doubt, try both forms: "ring" and "rings", "clan" and "clans" for instance.
Sometimes you may want to search not only for a particular keyword, but also for its synonyms. Indicate a search for both by placing the tilde sign ("~") immediately in front of the keyword. For example ~Wedding~Scottish~Ring.
Search for complete phrases by enclosing them in quotation marks. Words enclosed in double quotes ("Scottish Rings") will appear together in all results exactly as you have entered them.
Most searches support the logical "OR" operator. To retrieve pages that include either word Scottish or word Scotland, use an uppercase OR between terms. For example, to search for your new gold or silver Scottish Ring, just type: "scottish ring gold OR silver"