Sterling Silver Hindu Ganesh Ring
SKU: 1040
Four arms, each holding a different sacred item. Lord Ganesh sits in full meditation pose on this sterling silver ring — a complete 3D sculpture rising off the band. The face measures a full inch wide by 1⅜ inches tall, with an ornate mukut crown framing the elephant head and oxidized crevices deepening every bead on his necklaces. At 30 grams of .925 silver, this Hindu Ganesh ring carries real mass.
Who This Is Actually For
If you follow Hindu tradition — This is a wearable Ganesh with genuine iconographic detail. The four arms hold his traditional items — axe, rope, modak sweet, and blessing palm. The mukut crown and beaded necklaces follow classical depictions. It's a talisman, not a fashion interpretation.
If you collect deity rings — At 25mm × 35mm face and 30 grams, this is one of the larger Ganesh rings available. The full meditation pose with all four arms sets it apart from side-profile or head-only designs you'll find elsewhere.
If you wear statement silver — The 3D sculpting throws shadows that shift with the light. Oxidized recesses frame every carved surface, while the polished high points catch attention from across a room. Thirty grams on one finger makes a quiet entrance impossible.
What It's Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The face stands roughly ⅝ inch above the band. You notice it when gripping a steering wheel or wrapping your hand around a glass — the sculpture presses into your adjacent fingers slightly. After a week, you stop thinking about it.
Oxidized finish settles into every carved line — the necklace beads, the grooves between Ganesh's four hands, the folds of the crown. Polished surfaces catch light while recessed areas stay dark. That contrast actually sharpens over months of wear as the high points develop a brighter shine.
The split shank design means the band divides as it meets the sculpture. Air passes through, which matters in warm weather. It also keeps the ring from feeling like a solid block on your finger.
Heads up: The four-arm sculpture has small gaps between the arms and body. Lint and soap residue collect there. A soft toothbrush under warm water every couple weeks keeps the detail sharp.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: Is there a meaning behind Ganesh's four arms on this ring?
Each arm holds a traditional item — an axe (cutting attachment), a rope (drawing devotees toward truth), a modak sweet (the reward of spiritual practice), and a raised palm (blessing and protection). The ring captures all four in miniature. It follows classical Hindu iconography, not a stylized interpretation.
Q: Can I wear a 30-gram ring every day without discomfort?
Most customers who buy this ring wear it daily as their signature piece. The wide band spreads the weight across your finger — no pinch point. You'll feel the mass for the first few days. After a week, it just feels normal.
Q: Will the oxidized dark areas eventually wear off?
The deep crevices — between the arms, inside the crown folds, around the necklace beads — stay dark because your skin and friction can't reach them. The exposed high points brighten over time. The contrast between dark and light actually gets better with months of wear.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
If you want a Ganesh ring with a two-tone look, the Sterling Silver Ganesha Hindu God Ring pairs a silver elephant head with gold-toned brass accents — a temple-inspired contrast at 21 grams.
For Ganesh with gemstones, the Ganesha Gemstone Ring adds red and green CZ crystals to a lotus-base design — same deity, completely different aesthetic.
If you'd rather carry Ganesh as a pendant, the Ganesha Tusk Pendant features a carved Ganesh cap on a curved silver tusk engraved with oriental scrollwork.








