Eye of Providence Ring — .925 Sterling Silver with Brass & Copper
SKU: 3661
Three metals in one ring. The pyramid face is cast in .925 sterling silver, with a brass eye set at the apex and copper crosses flanking each side. The Eye of Providence design reads clearly at 17mm × 23mm — large enough to show the triangular geometry and radiant lines without overwhelming your hand. An adjustable open shank fits US sizes 7 through 10 without the guesswork of traditional sizing.
Wear This If
If you're drawn to esoteric or Masonic symbolism — The pyramid-and-eye motif on this ring is the real deal, not a simplified logo stamp. The brass eye sits recessed in the silver pyramid, and the copper crosses on the flanks add a Templar-era dimension. Three metals, three layers of meaning on one band.
If you want a ring that fits without guessing your size — The open shank lets you squeeze or spread the band between US 7 and 10. Adjust it once, wear it daily. No resizing tools, no returns for wrong fit.
If you collect symbolic jewelry across cultures — This piece bridges Masonic tradition, Egyptian iconography, and Christian cross motifs in a single adjustable band. At 11 grams, it works as a daily rotation piece alongside heavier statement rings.
Living With This Ring
The first thing that catches your attention is the color contrast. The oxidized silver base runs cool and dark, the brass pyramid eye glows warm gold, and the copper crosses add a reddish tone that sits somewhere between the two. Three distinct metals, three distinct temperatures of color on one surface.
The oxidized finish darkens every carved line in the pyramid and the radiant lines around the eye. Under direct light, the raised silver edges reflect while the grooves stay shadowed. It changes slightly depending on the lighting — warmer tones pull out the brass, cooler light emphasizes the silver structure.
Heads up: The open-shank design leaves a visible gap at the back of the band. It's what makes the adjustability work, but it can snag on knit fabrics or glove liners if left loose. Adjust it snug to your finger and it stays put.
At 11 grams, this isn't a heavy ring. You'll barely register it during a full day of wear. The face stands about 4.8mm tall — enough to catch attention but flat enough that typing and gripping aren't an issue.
What's Inside
Good Questions
Q: Where does the Eye of Providence symbol come from?
The Eye of Providence first appeared in Renaissance Christian art — a single eye inside a triangle representing God's watchfulness. It later became associated with Freemasonry and appears on the US one-dollar bill's Great Seal. This ring uses the original triangular pyramid format with radiant lines extending from the eye.
Q: Will the brass and copper change color over time?
Yes — that's part of how tri-metal jewelry ages. The brass darkens to a deeper gold-brown, and the copper develops a warm patina. The sterling silver continues to oxidize in the grooves while high points brighten from daily contact. All three metals age at different rates, so the color contrast actually intensifies over the first few months.
Q: How do I adjust the open shank without damaging it?
Gently squeeze or spread the back of the band with both thumbs. Adjust once to your finger size and leave it. Repeated bending weakens the metal over time. If you're between sizes, go slightly snug — the silver conforms to your finger shape within a few days of wear.
Specs vs Reality
You Might Also Want
If you want the same Eye of Providence symbol as a necklace, the Eye of Providence Sterling Silver Pendant carries the design in a 5-gram pendant format with an optional silver chain.
For Masonic rings with a different emblem, the Scottish Rite Masonic Ring features a double-headed eagle with mystic topaz in .925 sterling silver.
Same All-Seeing Eye, different format — the All-Seeing Eye Gremlin Bell Pendant is a two-tone silver and brass bell built for bike frames or heavy neck chains.








