Fang Devil Ring — .925 Sterling Silver with Red CZ Eyes
SKU: 3055
Who This Is Actually For
If you collect gothic or demonic jewelry — The abstract openwork frame on this ring sets it apart from standard skull designs. The fangs are polished to a mirror finish while the surrounding silver stays oxidized, so the contrast between bright and dark shifts depending on the light angle.
If you ride and want ring weight you can feel through gloves — At 38 grams, this sits heavy on your hand. The openwork construction means there's no flat inner plate pressing into your finger during long grips. You feel the mass on top, not underneath.
If you want a ring that starts conversations — The red CZ eyes catch light from across a room. People notice. They ask about the fangs first, then the eyes. It's not subtle jewelry — it's built to be seen and asked about.
What It's Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The fangs have a glossy, glass-smooth surface — the polishing work here is genuinely impressive. Each fang tapers to a rounded point (not sharp enough to scratch anything, but pointed enough to look aggressive). The oxidized recesses between the brow ridge and the eye sockets create shadow lines that make the face look different at every angle.
Those red CZ stones are set deep under the brow. In direct light, they flash a garnet-like red. In dim light, they go almost black. It's a nice effect — the "eyes" seem to change mood depending on where you are.
The openwork design means you can see through parts of the ring from certain angles. This gives it a three-dimensional depth that solid rings don't have. Turn your hand and new details appear — a ridge you hadn't noticed, a shadow behind a fang.
Heads up: The openwork sections can trap soap residue and lotion if you don't rinse after washing your hands. A quick soak in warm water with a soft brush every couple of weeks keeps the details sharp.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: Are the red eyes real rubies?
No — they're brilliant-cut red cubic zirconia. CZ gives you that deep garnet-red color with strong light refraction, and it's much more durable for daily wear than natural rubies at this size. The color stays vivid even after years of wear.
Q: Is the ring solid or hollow inside?
The ring uses an openwork construction — parts of the frame are intentionally hollowed out to create the skeletal, three-dimensional look. But the silver itself is solid .925 sterling, and the 38-gram weight confirms there's real mass here. It's not a thin shell.
Q: Is there a meaning behind the fang devil design?
Devil and demon imagery in jewelry typically represents rebellion, inner strength, or the willingness to embrace a darker side. The saber fangs add a predatory edge — they're borrowed from ancient depictions of guardian beasts. In biker culture, devil rings often signal independence and a refusal to conform.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
Same ring, different gaze — the Fang Devil Ring with Diamond Eyes swaps the red CZ for clear stones. The effect is colder, more calculated. Worth comparing if you haven't decided on eye color yet.
For a devil ring with a different silhouette, the Two-Tone Claw Devil Ring uses a claw motif instead of fangs — more compact, with gold and silver contrast.
Browse the full Devil Rings collection for more demonic and gothic designs in sterling silver.









