Sterling Silver Viking Axe Pendant with Brass Skull Accent
SKU: 3229
Two axe blades fan out from a brass skull that sits dead center — not painted on, not plated, but a separate solid brass element set into .925 sterling silver. The double-bitted design references the Norse skeggøx, the bearded axe that Viking warriors carried as both tool and weapon. At 27mm wide and 52mm tall, this sterling silver Viking axe pendant has enough presence to sit on top of a shirt — but it’s shaped to lie flat against your chest when tucked inside.
Who This Is Actually For
If you collect Norse-themed jewelry — The brass skull isn’t decorative filler. It’s a second metal with its own aging pattern. Brass darkens into antique gold while the silver stays bright, so the contrast between skull and axe blades deepens the longer you wear this pendant.
If you ride — 15 grams of solid sterling silver doesn’t bounce around at highway speed. The flat back sits flush against skin, and the bail takes standard 2–3mm chains or a thick leather cord without pinching or snagging your collar.
If you want a gift that holds its value — The .925 hallmark is stamped on the back. Sterling silver doesn’t degrade. Twenty years from now this pendant looks the same after a 30-second polish — and the brass skull will have developed a patina that makes it look even better.
What It’s Like to Use (The Honest Take)
The brass skull sits recessed between the two blades. It catches light at a different angle than the surrounding silver — shifting from pale gold to warm bronze depending on the room. That two-metal interplay is the first thing people comment on.
Turn it over and the back is smooth and flat. No hollow cavity, no rough casting marks. Just polished silver with the .925 stamp pressed into the surface.
Heads up: Brass oxidizes faster than sterling silver. After a few months of wear, the skull takes on a darker antique tone while the axe blades stay brighter. Most owners like this natural two-tone aging — but if you prefer matching tones, a quick rub with a polishing cloth resets the brass.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You’re Probably Asking
Q: Will the brass skull change color separately from the silver?
Yes. Brass oxidizes faster, so it darkens into antique gold while the silver stays lighter. This creates deeper contrast over time. A polishing cloth brings it back to bright if you prefer matching tones.
Q: What chain size fits through the bail?
Standard 2–3mm chains or leather cords slide through easily. Thick curb or figaro chains over 3mm might be tight — check your chain width before ordering.
Q: Is there a meaning behind the double-bitted axe?
The double-bitted axe — or skeggøx — was a Viking warrior’s primary tool, used for combat, wood-splitting, and camp building. Two blades meant the axe stayed useful even when one edge dulled. As a symbol, it represents preparedness and self-reliance.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
Same Norse bloodline, different weapon — the Viking Fenrir Wolf Mjolnir Pendant pairs a wolf motif with Thor’s hammer in solid .925 silver.
If the silver-and-brass contrast is what drew you in, the Two-Tone Skull Pendant uses the same mixed-metal approach on a classic skull design.
For a different weapon motif in sterling silver, check the Dagger Pendant — same craftsmanship, blade-and-guard design.







