King Cobra Ring — .925 Sterling Silver with Split Shank
SKU: 3016
The split shank is what sets this cobra apart from every other snake ring in the collection. The band divides below the head, each side carrying its own scale texture before reuniting at the back. The King Cobra Ring weighs 24 grams of .925 sterling silver. The cobra rears in full strike posture: mouth wide open, fangs bared, hood implied through the sculpted face. Every scale on the body is individually carved. The oxidized finish creates visible shadow lines between each one.
Who This Is Actually For
If you want the most aggressive cobra posture in a ring — mouth open, fangs out, no subtlety. The strike posture catches attention right away. At 24 grams, it's heavier than most snake rings in this collection. That translates to more silver in the sculpted face and thicker scale detail across the split shank.
If you appreciate the split-shank engineering — the divided band isn't just visual. It wraps each side of your finger independently, which lets the ring sit flatter and more comfortably than a standard thick band. The two branches rejoin at the back to create a solid structure that won't flex or bend.
If you ride and want a ring that matches your energy — the bared fangs and open mouth are a universal "don't test me" signal. On the throttle hand, the cobra face catches sunlight whenever you shift grip. The hollow eye sockets create dark voids that make the head look alive from a distance.
What It's Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The fangs are the focal point. They extend forward from the open jaw, two pointed silver teeth that catch light from any direction. The upper jaw has a slight curve. The lower jaw drops open at roughly 30 degrees. Between the fangs, the inside of the mouth shows carved texture that mimics the roof of a snake's mouth.
The split shank creates a V-shape where it meets the cobra's body. The two branches carry different scale patterns — watching the snake's body divide into two separate tails. Each branch is wide enough to display several rows of scales. The oxidized finish sits deep in the scale grooves while the ridges catch a brighter polish.
Heads up: The fangs are pointed but not razor-sharp — they won't cut you, but you'll notice them when you grip something tightly. If you do detailed handwork (mechanics, woodworking), the open-mouth design might press against your adjacent finger slightly.
At 24 grams, this ring plants itself on your finger. The split shank spreads the weight across a wider surface than a standard band, so the pressure feels distributed rather than concentrated. After a few days of wear, the scales on the high points develop a brighter polish from contact — the cobra literally transforms as you use it.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: Are the fangs sharp enough to scratch things?
They're pointed but rounded at the tips — you can feel them when you grip something, but they won't scratch a phone screen or tear fabric. The tips sit within the overall profile of the ring face, not sticking out past the edges.
Q: What does the king cobra represent as a symbol?
The king cobra is the only snake that builds nests for its eggs — it's a protector, not just a predator. In Thai and Indian culture, the Naga king cobra guards sacred spaces. The strike posture represents readiness and authority — defending what matters.
Q: How does the split shank affect sizing?
The split shank rejoins into a standard band at the back, so sizing works normally. The split section sits on top of your finger, not where the measurement matters. Order your usual ring size.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
For a coiled cobra with a flared hood and CZ eyes, the Cobra Snake Ring takes a different approach — defensive posture rather than strike, with sparkling clear stones in the eye sockets.
If you want the snake combined with a skull, the Snake Head Skull Ring wraps a cobra around a death head at 30 grams with Fleur-de-Lis framing.
Browse more serpent designs in the snake rings collection — rings, bracelets, pendants, and cuffs.










