Heavy Sterling Silver Cracked Skull Ring with Green Eye
SKU: 2013
One vivid green CZ eye burns from a recessed socket. The other side is a hollow, dark void. The Heavy Sterling Silver Cracked Skull Ring with Green Eye is a gothic skull ring built around that single bold asymmetry — 30 grams of solid .925 sterling silver carrying a face that refuses to be symmetrical. The imbalance is the whole point, and it works.
Who Wears This
If you've been hunting for a big sterling silver skull ring — one that photographs well and still holds up in person when it finally arrives — this is a strong contender. The 30-gram build looks solid on camera. And it feels exactly that way when you slide it on. No gap between expectation and reality.
If biker jewelry is your thing and your collection needs a centrepiece with real character — the cracked lines across the forehead give this ring visual battle damage that holds up at a rally. It's not subtle. The face spans a full inch by one-and-a-quarter — it commands the finger.
If you're buying a heavy silver skull ring as a gift — and need something distinctive enough that it'll actually get worn daily, the green eye is the detail that earns it a permanent spot. Distinctive enough to feel personal, restrained enough for every day — a harder balance to strike than it sounds.
Wearing It Day to Day
What hits you immediately out of the box: the weight lands with authority. Hold it and the cool silver body settles into your palm — dense, solid, nothing hollow anywhere in it.
The crack lines are carved deep enough to cast their own shadows. Not surface scratches — actual channels in the silver, ridges and valleys deep enough to trace without looking. The high-polish finish along the jawline and cheekbones catches light hard. The contrast between those mirror-bright surfaces and the rough, scarred forehead is where the design earns its keep.
The emerald-green CZ sits deep enough in the socket that it won't snag, but it still throws a vivid green flash at almost any angle. The opposite socket is completely hollow and dark — an asymmetry you rarely see on sterling silver gothic rings, and it gives the whole face a lopsided menace that comes across as intentional rather than unfinished.
One honest caveat: the band width presses against neighboring fingers if you're stacking rings side by side. Go up half a size if you plan to wear this next to another chunky piece. It's not a design flaw — just physics and finger real estate.
And that small clear CZ tucked into one of the teeth? Didn't expect it to earn its place. But when light catches it at the right angle — a quick, almost sinister glint — it rewards a second look. Smart, restrained touch.
What Goes Into This Ring
Common Questions
Q: Is the green eye a real emerald?
No — it's a high-quality emerald-green cubic zirconia with deep color and clean clarity. For daily wear in an exposed setting like this, a natural stone would chip or cloud far faster. The CZ is the smarter call here, and the color is genuinely vivid.
Q: Why is one eye socket left empty?
It's deliberate. The hollow socket plays against the lit green CZ on the other side — one eye burning, one eye dark — which gives the face its lopsided menace. A second stone would make the skull symmetrical and ordinary. The empty socket sits deep and dark, so it reads as a true void rather than a missing part.
Q: Can I actually wear a 30-gram ring every day?
Yes. Most people adjust to the weight within a day or two — it becomes background awareness rather than a distraction. Sterling is tough enough for daily use. Pull it off before heavy shop work or chemical exposure. Standard common sense for any silver piece.
Q: How do I size a wide-band skull ring like this correctly?
Wide bands fit tighter than thin ones. If you're between sizes, go up. Get measured at a local jeweler if possible — it's five minutes and free at most shops. A ring this heavy that's even a quarter-size too small is genuinely uncomfortable over a long day.
At a Glance
You Might Also Want
The Candy Skull Ring with green eyes runs lighter and two-tone — worth considering if you want a second skull piece that doesn't compete with this one for wrist real estate.
Sterling silver skull bracelets pair naturally with a ring this heavy. The skull bracelets collection has solid .925 options in the same weight class. A few are built to sit alongside big rings without looking mismatched.
For a pendant that carries the same cracked-skull energy in a different format, the two-tone skull pendant layers well on a chain over the kind of shirt this ring already demands.
If you like this kind of weight and detail, browse every skull ring we make — all handcrafted in .925 sterling.










