Back Dori With Hook vs Plain Thread vs Adjustable Chain

When a necklace set needs a back closure, most buyers and makers compare three options: back dori with hook, plain thread, and adjustable chain. All three can work, but they are not equal for comfort, finishing, durability and desi styling.
If you are fixing a broken necklace, making a choker set, finishing terracotta jewellery or preparing boutique stock, the right choice depends on the weight of the necklace, how often it will be worn, and how clean the back should look.
Quick Comparison

| Option | Best For | Main Benefit | Watch Out For |
| Back dori with hook | Ethnic necklace sets, chokers, terracotta, silk thread jewellery, repairs | Ready closure, neat back, easier wearing | Needs side loops/rings on necklace |
| Plain thread | Temporary fixes, lightweight DIY work, low-cost samples | Flexible and easy to source | Can look unfinished, needs tying, may loosen |
| Adjustable chain | Western-style pendants, metal chains, simple neckpieces | Precise length adjustment | May not match traditional or handmade sets |
What Is Back Dori With Hook?
Back dori with hook is a finished necklace back rope with small metal hooks attached at the ends. Many styles also include tassels, pearl finishing, zari thread, beads or latkan details. The hook attaches to necklace loops and the dori sits behind the neck.
This option is useful when you want the back to look intentional, not like a last-minute repair. For Indian jewellery, the back is often visible with blouse necks, buns, lehengas, sarees and choker styling, so the finishing matters.
Best use cases:
- Necklace back repair.
- Choker and pendant finishing.
- Terracotta jewellery dori.
- Silk thread jewellery dori.
- Boutique alteration and repeat stock.
- Festive or wedding jewellery sets where the back should also look neat.
What Is Plain Thread?
Plain thread is the simplest option. It can be cotton thread, silk thread, nylon thread or any strong jewellery thread tied through necklace loops.
It works when the necklace is very light or when you only need a temporary fix. But for customer-ready jewellery, plain thread can feel incomplete unless it is finished properly. It may need knots, trimming, sealing and colour matching.
Plain thread is best for:
- Trial fitting.
- Temporary repair.
- Very lightweight handmade pieces.
- DIY work where the back will not be visible.
Avoid plain thread when:
- The necklace is heavy.
- The buyer needs easy wearing without tying knots.
- The back will be visible.
- You are selling the piece and want a cleaner professional finish.
What Is an Adjustable Chain?
An adjustable chain is usually a metal extension chain used to change necklace length. It is common in pendant chains, daily-wear metal necklaces and western-style jewellery.
It gives neat length control, but it may not always match ethnic or handmade jewellery. On terracotta, silk thread, kundan-style, pearl tassel or festive sets, a plain metal chain can look disconnected from the design unless the front is also metal-focused.
Adjustable chain is best for:
- Pendant chains.
- Lightweight metal necklaces.
- Everyday neck chains.
- Jewellery where metal hardware matches the front design.
Which Looks Better for Indian Necklace Sets?
For many Indian necklace sets, back dori with hook looks more natural than plain thread or metal chain. The dori can match the colour, texture and festive mood of the necklace. Pearl tassel, beaded tassel, gold thread, black dori or zari finishing can make the back look like part of the design.
Plain thread is more basic. Adjustable chain is more functional. Hook dori gives both function and styling, especially when the necklace is worn with saree, lehenga, blouse, kurti or festive outfits.
In simple buyer terms: if the back will show, choose a dori that looks good from the back too.
Which Is Easier to Wear?
Back dori with hook is usually easier than plain thread because it does not need tying every time. The hook attaches quickly and the fit can be checked before stepping out.
Plain thread may need another person to tie it neatly, especially for a close choker. It can also become uneven if one side is pulled more.
Adjustable chain is also easy to wear, but the chain style must suit the necklace. For heavy or handmade jewellery, make sure the chain and jump rings can hold the weight.
Which Is Better for Jewellery Makers and Boutiques?
For makers, boutiques and repair counters, dori with hook is usually the most practical stock item. It solves a common buyer problem: "back ka closure clean chahiye" without needing custom tying for every order.
Keep a few common options ready:
- Simple hook dori for basic necklace repair.
- Pearl tassel dori for festive necklace sets.
- Beaded or zari dori for terracotta and handmade jewellery.
- Multi-piece packs for repeat boutique work.
- Matching black/gold/pearl tones for common Indian jewellery colours.
Plain thread can still be useful for custom work, but it takes more time to finish. Adjustable chain is useful for metal-based necklaces, not every ethnic set.
Which One Should You Choose?
Choose back dori with hook if:
- You want a clean ready closure.
- The necklace is ethnic, festive, handmade or choker-style.
- The back will be visible.
- You are repairing or finishing multiple pieces.
- You want the product to feel customer-ready.
Choose plain thread if:
- You need a quick temporary fix.
- The piece is very light.
- You are still testing length or design.
- The back will not be visible.
Choose adjustable chain if:
- The necklace is metal-based.
- You need exact length adjustment.
- The chain visually matches the front.
- The piece is more pendant/chain style than dori-style.
SHARALLE Recommendation
For most Indian necklace sets, start with necklace back dori with hook. It is the safest practical option for a neat finish, quick wearing and festive-ready back styling. Plain thread and adjustable chains still have their place, but hook dori is usually better when the buyer wants the necklace to look complete from every angle.
Want the back of your necklace to look as finished as the front? SHARALLE has necklace back dori, dori with hook, pearl tassel dori and maker-friendly packs for repairs, handmade jewellery and festive styling.
Shop SHARALLE Necklace Back Dori
FAQ
Is back dori with hook better than plain thread?
For most finished necklace sets, yes. Back dori with hook is easier to wear and usually looks cleaner than plain thread. Plain thread is better for temporary repair, trial fitting or very lightweight DIY work.
Can I replace an adjustable chain with dori?
Yes, if the necklace has suitable loops or rings and the dori style matches the necklace. For ethnic, terracotta, silk thread or choker-style sets, dori may look more natural than a metal chain.
Which option is best for terracotta jewellery?
Back dori with hook is often a good choice for terracotta jewellery because it can match the handmade look while still giving a secure closure. Use a stronger dori for heavier pendants.
Does plain thread last long?
It depends on the thread quality, knotting and necklace weight. Plain thread can last on light pieces, but it may loosen, fray or look unfinished faster than a proper hook dori.
What should boutiques keep in stock?
Boutiques and jewellery makers should keep common hook dori styles, pearl tassel dori, basic black/gold dori and multipacks. This helps with quick repairs, custom orders and repeat buyer requests.
Upgrade From Plain Thread
For a finished Indian jewellery look, use hook dori for fast attachment, tassel dori for decoration, or chain when the design needs a metal back.