Thor’s Hammer Mjolnir Ring — .925 Sterling Silver Norse Band
SKU: 3860_9.5
Wear this Thor’s Hammer Mjolnir ring to a meeting, a concert, or a ride — it works in all three. The hammer face takes up most of the finger between knuckles, but the dragon scale band wrapping around the sides keeps it from looking bulky in profile. Inside, the band is smooth .925 sterling silver. At 23 grams with a 25mm × 28mm face, this Mjolnir ring has triquetra knotwork carved into the hammer head and a small bail loop at the top — a nod to the pendant tradition that Mjolnir comes from.
Wear This If
If you follow Norse or Celtic tradition — The triquetra on the hammer face represents the cycle of life, death, and rebirth — three interlocking arcs with no beginning or end. The Celtic knotwork surrounding it mirrors patterns found on Viking runestones. This isn’t random decoration.
If you work with your hands — The dragon scale texture around the band adds grip — this ring doesn’t spin on your finger the way polished bands do. The oxidized finish hides daily wear marks instead of showing every scratch. After three months it looks better, not worse.
If you want one ring for every occasion — The knotwork reads as sophisticated in formal settings. The hammer motif reads as bold in casual ones. The oxidized silver tone pairs with black, brown, and gray equally well. You don’t need to swap rings when you change outfits.
Living With This Ring
The triquetra on the hammer face has three distinct lobes, each carved to the same depth. Light pools in the oxidized channels between them. From arm’s length, the knotwork reads as a single intricate pattern. Up close, each strand is individually carved — you can trace the path of one knot all the way around without it ending.
The dragon scale band isn’t just visual. Each scale is a small raised bump — not sharp, but textured enough that the ring grips your finger lightly instead of sliding. After a few weeks, the high points of each scale polish brighter while the gaps between them stay dark.
Heads up: The bail loop at the top of the hammer head adds about 3–4mm of height to the ring’s profile. It’s decorative, not functional — borrowed from traditional Mjolnir pendant design. But it sits high enough that it can catch on jacket pockets or knit gloves if you’re not used to it.
What’s Inside
Good Questions
Q: Why is there a loop at the top of the ring?
That’s a bail — a design element borrowed from traditional Mjolnir pendants. On the ring, it’s purely decorative. It connects the hammer design to the pendant tradition and adds about 3–4mm of height to the ring’s profile.
Q: What does the triquetra symbol mean?
The triquetra is a trinity knot — three interlocking arcs with no start and no end. In Norse and Celtic tradition, it represents the cycle of life, death, and rebirth. Some interpret the three arcs as earth, sea, and sky.
Q: Will the dragon scale band pattern smooth out over time?
No. The scales are carved deep enough to hold up under daily wear. What changes is the contrast — the raised scale edges polish brighter while the gaps stay dark from oxidation. The pattern actually becomes more defined with age.
Specs vs Reality
You Might Also Want
For a different Norse ring silhouette, the Viking Ring is a solid sterling silver band with Norse warrior engraving — lower profile, same heritage.
If the Celtic knotwork is what caught your eye, the Celtic Cross Ring focuses entirely on interlocking knot patterns in oxidized .925 silver.
The Anchor Viking Ring mixes sterling silver with brass accents — same Norse styling, added mixed-metal contrast.
Browse more in the rocker rings collection, or see the full men's sterling silver jewelry range.










