Red Spider Gothic Ring — .925 Sterling Silver
SKU: 3716
Each web strand on this ring sits raised off the band — thin silver ridges that radiate from the spider's body across the entire face. At the center, a spider clutches a deep red stone, legs splayed outward into the web. Cast in solid .925 sterling silver at 17 grams, it's a gothic piece with genuine raised texture across the whole face.
Built For
If you wear gothic jewelry daily — The spider sits flush against the band with a 19mm × 23mm face. Big enough for the web pattern to read clearly, low-profile enough that it won't snag on pockets or gloves. The oxidized grooves keep detail visible after months of wear.
If you collect spider or insect designs — The red stone centerpiece is the one spot of color in an otherwise all-silver design. Gothic lettering runs along the shank sides, so the detail doesn't stop at the face — the band itself carries the theme.
If you want a statement ring that isn't a skull — Spider rings draw eyes without defaulting to the usual biker motifs. The web wrapping the face makes it more intricate than a single-emblem band, and the red stone adds color most silver rings don't have.
The Honest Take
The spider's body is compact — maybe 8 or 9mm across — but the legs extend outward into the web lines, so the whole face reads as one connected design rather than a small figure on a big surface. That red stone catches light differently depending on the angle. Bright red under direct light, almost black in a dim room.
Oxidized silver fills the web grooves while the high points — spider legs, web intersections, the stone bezel — stay polished bright. After a few weeks of daily wear, your skin oils gradually polish those raised sections further. The contrast between dark and light actually sharpens over time rather than fading.
The gothic lettering on the shank sides is small. You can feel it under your thumb, but reading it requires good light and close distance. It functions more as decorative texture than legible script — adds visual noise to the band in a good way.
Under the Hood
Before You Buy
Q: What type of stone is the red one in the spider?
It's a red accent stone set securely into the spider's body. Under direct light it reads as deep red — in dim settings, it shifts closer to black. The color change is one of the details that makes this ring look different depending on where you are.
Q: Will the oxidized web pattern wear off?
The dark oxidation sits in recessed grooves — protected by the raised web strands and spider legs above it. High points will gradually brighten with wear, which actually sharpens the contrast between dark and light areas. Avoid chemical dips — they'll strip the finish.
Q: Can you read the gothic lettering on the sides?
Barely. The letters are small and highly stylized — they work as decorative texture more than readable text. You can feel them clearly with a fingertip, but actually reading them takes good light and close inspection. They're meant to add a gothic, weathered feel to the shanks rather than spell out a clear message.
At a Glance
You Might Also Want
If you like the spider motif but want a two-tone look, the Gothic Spider Ring pairs a gold-plated spider against silver webbing — same creature, different finish.
For a heavier take on the red-stone spider concept, the Red Stone Spider Web Ring at 27 grams puts a larger red CZ in the center of a fully 3D carved web — more weight, more surface detail.
For more creature-themed designs in sterling silver, browse the full animal ring collection — eagles, owls, wolves, and more.
Or step into the full sterling silver gothic rings collection for crosses, skulls, demon motifs, and more dark-style designs in the same solid .925 build.










