Ruby Red Dragon Claw Sterling Silver Ring
SKU: 2791
The ruby red CZ in this claw is the brightest red in the dragon claw lineup — a saturated, vivid red with no purple undertone, no wine-dark moodiness like the garnet version, just clean red fire that reads from across a room. The Ruby Red Dragon Claw Ring is 26 grams of .925 sterling silver, holding a 15mm × 20mm emerald-cut ruby red CZ in a dragon talon grip. The band sides feature warrior axe motifs carved into the textured silver — a detail that pushes this variant further into medieval territory than the other colors.
Wear This If
If you want the purest red in the claw family — the garnet version leans wine-dark with a purple undertone. Imperial topaz goes amber. This is straight red — the kind that doesn't need qualifying adjectives. Under any lighting condition, it reads as red first, red last, nothing else.
If medieval fantasy aesthetics speak to you — the warrior axe symbols carved into both shanks add a combat layer that pairs naturally with the dragon claw theme. It's not just a dragon holding a stone — there's a warrior narrative built into the band itself.
If you want the dragon claw at standard weight — at 26 grams, this matches the garnet and sapphire versions exactly. The imperial topaz variant comes in lighter at 22 grams, so this one carries more presence on the finger without crossing into heavy territory.
Living With This Ring
The ruby red CZ has a different optical personality than the garnet. Where garnet absorbs light and goes dark in dim rooms, ruby red reflects it — you get brighter, cleaner red flashes from the emerald-cut facets. Under fluorescent office lighting, the red is almost electric. Under warm incandescent, it deepens to cherry. The color shifts slightly, but it's always clearly red.
The emerald cut shows the color in wide, flat reflections rather than scattered sparkle. You see clean rectangles of red light, not a shimmering blur. The dragon talons grip the stone in an open setting, leaving it visible from multiple sides — the oxidized silver around the claws goes dark, which pushes the red forward visually. Maximum contrast between metal and stone.
Heads up: The warrior axe motifs on the band sides sit in shallow relief — visible when you look for them, but the stone dominates attention in daily wear. If you're buying specifically for the axe detail, know it's a supporting design element, not the primary feature. The ruby red CZ is what people notice first.
What's Inside
Good Questions
Q: What's the difference between ruby red CZ and garnet CZ?
Color temperature. Garnet CZ leans toward wine-dark burgundy with a purple undertone — it looks almost black in dim lighting. Ruby red CZ is a saturated, true red closer to the hue of natural pigeon-blood ruby. Under bright light, garnet goes deep and moody. Ruby red goes bright and vivid. Same stone hardness, same emerald cut, different energy entirely.
Q: Are the warrior axe symbols raised or engraved?
Shallow relief — they sit slightly raised above the textured band surface. The oxidized finish darkens the surrounding texture, which helps the axe shapes read more clearly. They're small but distinct once you know to look for them.
Q: Is this the same casting as the other dragon claw colors?
Same claw structure and face dimensions. The talons, scales, and band profile are identical across the color variants. Only the stone changes. If you own the garnet, sapphire, or black version, you already know exactly how this ring fits and feels on your finger.
Specs vs Reality
You Might Also Want
For the same claw in a cool blue, the Blue Sapphire Dragon Claw Ring holds a deep blue CZ against oxidized silver — the visual opposite of this ruby red.
If a gold finish appeals, the Gold Dragon Ring wraps a full-body Eastern dragon in 14K gold vermeil at 23 grams — different design, different metal energy.
See all stone colors and designs in the dragon rings collection.







