Dark Green Eyeball Ring — Large .925 Sterling Silver Gothic Eye Band
SKU: 3944
A dark green iris reads forest under indoor light, then shifts toward moss when sun catches the cabochon at an angle. The clear glass dome over it gives the eye a wet, lifelike depth — and the bezel framing it is almond-shaped, edged with filigree scrollwork that fans down both shoulders of the band. Twenty grams of solid .925 sterling silver, oxidized in the recesses, brings the weight of a real statement piece to your hand.
Best Suited For
If you wear statement rings — A 28×20mm almond bezel is impossible to miss. The dark green iris pulls people in close because it's not the color most evil-eye rings use. The filigree scrollwork wrapping the bezel and shoulders means there's detail from every angle — front, profile, top-down. People will ask what it is.
If you collect evil eye or eyeball jewelry — Dark green is the rare third option after blue and red. The cabochon dome gives the iris a watery depth, magnifying the green from within as the light shifts across it. A filigree-bordered almond setting reads more ornamental than the typical bezel-set evil eye. Sizes US 6 to 16 cover most fingers.
If you gravitate toward gothic or Halloween aesthetics — Dark green hits a different note than red or blue. It reads cold, slightly poisonous — closer to absinthe or a poison vial than fire or sky. The oxidized scrollwork around the band leans Victorian-gothic. Works year-round, not just October.
What Wearing It Actually Feels Like
Twenty grams shows up on your hand the moment you slide it on. The dome of the bezel sits proud — you'll feel it brush your other knuckles if you wear it on a middle finger, and you'll feel the weight when you hold a glass, grip a steering wheel, or rest your hand on a desk. After a few days it stops registering, but the first week you'll notice it constantly.
The green of the iris isn't flat — concentric rings of darker and lighter green radiate from the pupil, the way a real iris is striated. Tilt the ring under a light and you can see the cabochon's domed curve catch a thin highlight across the top. The filigree scrollwork on the bezel and shoulders has raised peaks and recessed shadows where the oxidation pools darkest — run your thumbnail across it and you feel the relief.
Heads up: The face is 28mm tall — about an inch. It rides higher than most rings. Sleeve cuffs, jacket pockets, and keyboard edges will bump it for the first few days. After that you adjust automatically. Don't expect it to disappear under a glove.
The .925 hallmark is stamped inside the band, near where the shoulder meets the inner ring. The inner band is smooth and rounded — no decoration on the inside that would press into your finger. The oxidation in the scrollwork recesses isn't paint; it's chemically darkened silver sulfide that won't wipe off with handling.
The Details That Matter
What People Want to Know
Q: How does the dark green look in different lighting?
Under warm indoor light it reads forest green — closer to pine or bottle glass. In direct sunlight the iris detail brightens slightly and the lighter green flecking in the concentric rings becomes visible. Under cool overhead light it leans toward emerald. The pupil stays solid black throughout.
Q: Will the green color fade with daily wear?
The green is part of the cabochon material itself — not a surface coating or paint. Daily wear won't fade it. The clear dome over the iris protects the painted-eye layer underneath. Avoid striking the dome directly against hard surfaces, but normal wear, sweat, and water exposure are fine.
Q: How does this compare to other evil eye colors?
Same .925 sterling base, same 28×20mm face, same 20-gram weight as our other oversized eye rings. The difference is the iris color and the bezel design. Dark green reads cooler and more unusual — most evil-eye jewelry sits in the red and blue spectrum. The almond filigree bezel here gives a more ornamental Victorian look than skeleton-claw or talon settings.
The Numbers
You Might Also Want
The original Purple Evil Eye Ring uses a skeleton-claw bezel instead of filigree — same weight and face size, more horror, less Victorian.
The Red Evil Eye Ring is the warm-spectrum companion — same large eye, red iris, more traditional evil-eye energy.
For the eye as a pendant rather than a ring, the Evil Eye Necklace moves the symbol from your hand to your chest.
Browse more iris colors and bezel styles in the evil eye rings collection or the broader gothic rings collection.










