Gothic Devil Skull Sterling Silver Keychain — Red CZ Eyes, 65g
SKU: 2989
The chain links on this keychain are themselves small skulls — each one interlocking into the next, building a chain of faces between the devil skull head at one end and the key ring at the other. The devil skull works as a lobster clasp — its jaw opens to clip onto a belt loop, wallet chain, or bag strap. Red cubic zirconia stones sit in both eye sockets, catching whatever light is available. The whole piece is 5 inches of solid .925 sterling silver at 65 grams.
Who This Is Actually For
If you want a keychain that clips and unclips with one hand — the devil skull IS the clasp. Squeeze the jaw, hook it onto whatever you're attaching to, release. No separate carabiner or split ring to fumble with.
If you like red accents on silver — the red CZ stones sit in recessed sockets and don't protrude. They add color without making it look like costume jewelry. The red reads darker than ruby — more blood-tone than bright.
If you already own skull chain jewelry — the skull-link chain matches the same link style used on several wallet chains in the catalog. Clip this to one and the whole ensemble uses the same visual language from pocket to keys.
What It's Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The skull-link chain has a texture you don't get from standard links. Each skull face adds a tiny ridge, so the chain doesn't lay perfectly flat — it has character, a slight irregularity that makes it look handmade rather than stamped from a mold.
The lobster clasp mechanism built into the devil skull head takes a firm squeeze to open. It's stiffer than a standard jewelry clasp because it's cast in solid silver, not stamped from thin sheet metal. It loosens slightly after a few weeks of daily use.
At 5 inches, this is the longest keychain in the collection. It drapes rather than dangles — more like a short chain than a key fob. Looks best hanging from a belt loop where the full length is visible.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: Is the devil skull head the clasp, or is there a separate clip?
The skull IS the clasp. The jaw opens on a spring mechanism — squeeze to open, release to lock. There's no separate carabiner. The other end has a standard key ring link for your keys.
Q: What's the difference between devil skull and regular skull keychains?
The devil skull has horns and a more angular jaw. The chain links are also skull-shaped, not plain ovals. And the skull itself functions as the clasp — most other keychains use a separate link loop attachment.
Q: Will the red stones fall out with daily use?
The CZ stones are set flush into the eye sockets — they sit below the surface, not raised. Normal pocket wear, drops, and key jostling won't dislodge them. CZ is also harder than glass, so scratching is unlikely.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
The Red Eye Skeleton Skull Keychain also has red CZ eyes but uses a full skeleton motif instead of a devil skull — different design, same color accent.
If you prefer no stones, the Skull Gothic Key Chain keeps the gothic aesthetic in plain oxidized silver — all texture, no color.
For a dragon instead of a devil, the Dragon Claw Biker Keychain swaps skull links for a scaled claw gripping the keyring.


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