Sterling Silver Knight Dragon Ring
SKU: 3403
A knight in full plate armor sits astride a dragon — lance forward, shield braced, the dragon's wings partially spread beneath him. The Knight Dragon Ring weighs 23 grams of .925 sterling silver, with a ring face measuring approximately 1¼" × 1⅜" (32mm × 35mm). The composition is narrative rather than symbolic: this isn't a dragon motif, it's a scene frozen mid-charge, sculpted at ring scale.
Built For
If medieval fantasy is your aesthetic — this ring tells a story. The knight, the dragon, the lance, the wings — it's a miniature scene from a tapestry or a manuscript illumination, compressed into silver. People who collect medieval-themed jewelry will recognize this as something beyond a generic dragon ring — it's the full encounter.
If you play tabletop RPGs or collect fantasy art — this ring belongs in the same world as your D&D minis and Warhammer figures. The level of sculptural detail — individual armor plates, the dragon's wing membrane, the shield heraldry — reads like a pewter gaming miniature cast in sterling silver and bent into a ring.
If you want a conversation-starting ring — at 32mm × 35mm, the face is large enough that the scene is legible from across a table. People will notice it during meetings, handshakes, drinks. And they'll lean in to look closer — because the detail rewards inspection.
The Honest Take
The knight figure is remarkably detailed for ring-scale work — you can make out the visor on the helmet, the lance grip, and the shield face. The dragon beneath him has wings that extend to form part of the ring's side profile, which means the composition wraps around the finger rather than sitting only on top. The overall effect is a ring that looks different from every angle: knight from the top, dragon wings from the sides.
The oxidized finish picks out the gaps between the knight's armor plates and the dragon's scales. There's a contrast between the smooth, polished lance and the textured surfaces surrounding it. The back of the band is simpler — plain silver with a smooth inner surface for comfort.
Heads up: The face has a lot of surface area — 32mm × 35mm means it extends beyond the finger width. The dragon wing elements on the sides will touch adjacent fingers. If you prefer clearance between rings, wear this on the index or pinky finger where one side is open.
Under the Hood
Before You Buy
Q: Is the knight riding the dragon, or fighting it?
Riding it — the knight is mounted on the dragon's back with the lance pointing forward. It's a dragon rider scene, not a dragon slayer. Think Eragon, not Saint George.
Q: Do the dragon wings interfere with neighboring fingers?
They extend slightly beyond the finger's width. On the middle finger, you'll feel gentle contact with the index and ring fingers. On the index or pinky finger, one side is free. It's not uncomfortable — just noticeable when you close your fist.
Q: How detailed is the knight at this scale?
You can identify the visor, breastplate, lance, and shield individually. The dragon's wing membrane has textured ribbing. At arm's length, you see the overall scene. At close range, you find the smaller details — helmet plume, shield pattern, individual claws.
At a Glance
You Might Also Want
For a dragon without the knight — a pure beast design — the Massive Dragon Head Ring features an open-jawed dragon with a Shiva shell at 37 grams.
If you want dragon combat with a blade element, the Dragon Armor Ring pairs twin dragons with a center blade at 15 grams — lighter, more abstract.
See all designs in the dragon rings collection.










