Bat Ring — .925 Sterling Silver 3D Vampire Bat Design
SKU: 3654
The wing texture on this bat ring is the first thing your fingers find. Oxidized grooves run through each membrane — rough under your thumb — and then your finger slides to the polished head, smooth sterling silver catching light. That contrast isn't accidental. It's a 16-gram vampire bat cast in solid .925 sterling silver, wings spread wide at 25mm across, with a finish that plays dark against bright on every surface.
Wear This If
If you collect gothic jewelry — This bat doesn't look stamped or flat. The 3D sculpt has depth between the wing joints and body, with oxidized shadows settling into every fold. It holds up next to heavier pieces in a gothic collection without looking like the lightweight option.
If you want one ring that works day and night — At 16 grams and 25×20mm, it's visible without being bulky. The oxidized finish reads subtle in daylight and darker under low light. Works with black denim or a dress shirt — the bat silhouette carries either way.
If you're buying a gift for someone into vampire lore — The design leans classic Dracula-era bat, not cartoon. The crouched body and spread wings read immediately as "vampire bat" without being over-the-top. Comes in sizes 5.5 through 14, so it covers most hands.
Living With This Ring
The oxidized finish gives the wings real depth — dark grooves where the membrane folds, polished silver where the body curves outward. Over months of wear, the high points on the wings brighten slightly from friction. That's normal. It actually sharpens the contrast.
The face measures 25mm across and 20mm tall. Not oversized for a gothic ring, but the wing tips sit slightly above the band surface. You'll brush them reaching into a jacket pocket or pulling on gloves. After a few days you stop noticing.
Heads up: The wing tips extend past the band edge. If you type all day or wear tight-fitting gloves, you'll feel them make contact. Not sharp — just present.
Sterling silver at this weight tarnishes over time if left unworn. A quick pass with a polishing cloth brings back the shine on smooth areas. Don't polish the oxidized sections — that darkness is the whole point of the dual-finish design.
What's Inside
Good Questions
Q: Will the dark oxidized finish on the wings wear off?
The oxidized layer sits in the grooves and low points of the wing texture. Raised ridges may lighten with daily friction — that's expected and actually improves the light-dark contrast over time. If you ever want to re-darken the wings, any jeweler can re-oxidize sterling silver in about five minutes.
Q: Do the wing tips catch on clothing?
They extend a few millimeters past the band edge, so you'll brush pockets and cuffs occasionally. Nothing sharp or snagging — more like a slight awareness that the ring has dimension beyond the band. Most people stop noticing within a week.
Q: Can I wear this sterling silver bat ring in water?
Sterling silver handles water fine. Chlorine and salt water speed up tarnishing on the polished sections, so rinse after the pool or ocean. Sweat can darken the oxidized areas faster — which most people actually prefer since it deepens the wing texture.
Specs vs Reality
You Might Also Want
If you want the bat theme on your neck too, the Vampire Bat & Crescent Moon Pendant carries the same nocturnal energy in .925 silver with a gold crescent detail.
For another creature ring with more mass, the Werewolf Ring is a 30-gram beast — almost double this bat's weight, with the same level of 3D sculpting.
Different species, same dark energy — the Crow Skull Necklace is a lightweight gothic pendant that pairs well with a heavier ring on the hand.
See more dark designs in the gothic rings collection, or browse the wider animal rings lineup for wolves, eagles, cobras, and more creature bands in sterling silver.









