Gold Fleur De Lis Ring — .925 Sterling Silver Shield Signet
SKU: 2826
Raised silver ridges of scrollwork run along the shanks, sitting against your adjacent fingers when you make a fist. The face is a ¾" × ¾" shield with a 14K gold-plated fleur-de-lis sitting against a darkened, oxidized background. The gold catches warm light. The oxidized silver absorbs it. That push-pull between the two metals is what makes a 14-gram .925 sterling silver signet ring look like it belongs on a coat of arms.
Who This Is Actually For
If you want a heraldic ring for everyday, not just display — The shield face is sized for real life — visible from a handshake distance, small enough to type and grip without obstruction. The oxidized scrollwork on the band gives it detail from the side view, so it looks intentional even when only the band is showing.
If you like two-tone jewelry without the complexity — Gold fleur-de-lis on silver. That's the entire color story. No stones, no enamel, no third metal. The simplicity is the strength — it pairs with other silver or gold pieces without clashing because it already bridges both.
If you want a men's signet that works with suits and denim — The shield shape reads as classic menswear. The gold accent keeps it from looking too casual. The scrollwork keeps it from looking too formal. It sits in the middle of those two worlds and stays there regardless of what you're wearing above it.
What It's Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The gold fleur-de-lis is polished to a mirror finish. Under indoor lighting it throws tiny flashes when your hand moves — something photos don't capture well. The shield background behind it is deliberately darkened, which makes the gold pop rather than blend. The beaded border around the shield edge adds a frame-like detail you feel when you run your thumb across the face.
The scrollwork on the shanks isn't flat engraving — it's raised relief with oxidized valleys between the silver curves. It gives the ring texture from every angle, including the side view. When you're sitting at a table, the person across from you sees the scrollwork band rather than just a flat ring edge.
Heads up: This ring runs a bit snug through the band — the shield face creates a wider section that makes it feel tighter than a plain band of the same size. If you're between sizes, go up half a size.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: How long does the gold plating last?
With normal daily wear and basic care, it holds its color for years. The gold is on the raised emblem, which is somewhat protected by the surrounding shield border. Avoid harsh silver dips — those attack plating. A soft cloth is enough.
Q: Is this ring too flashy for the office?
No. The ¾" shield face is noticeable but not loud. The gold is an accent, not the entire ring. The oxidized background mutes the overall brightness. It reads as a traditional signet, not costume jewelry.
Q: How do I preserve the dark oxidized areas?
Polish only the raised surfaces with a soft cloth. The oxidation in the recessed scrollwork and shield background is intentional patina — skip the silver dip solution on those areas. The contrast between dark and bright is what makes the design readable.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
If you want the fleur-de-lis with a colored stone, the Sapphire Fleur De Lis Band Ring adds a 2.0ct blue CZ to the same heraldic motif on a 13mm wide band.
For a larger shield face with CZ border, the Gold Fleur De Lis Shield Ring with CZ Border adds 25 channel-set stones around the shield edge — bolder presence, same two-tone concept.
Browse all heraldic designs in the Rocker Rings collection.
For the full lineup in sterling silver and gold, browse our fleur de lis rings collection.









