Blue Topaz Dragon Claw Ring — .925 Sterling Silver with Sky-Blue CZ
SKU: 1020
Four silver claws grip a 36-carat slab of blue and refuse to let go. This blue topaz dragon claw ring weighs 30 grams of solid .925 sterling silver — hand-finished as a single piece, hand-finished by silversmiths, and built for the kind of person who wears one ring and lets it do all the talking. Best for men who want a statement piece that sits heavy on the hand and catches every shift of light in a room.
Who This Is Actually For
If you collect fantasy-inspired jewelry and your shelf already holds a graveyard of costume pieces that left green marks on your skin — this is the real thing. Hallmarked .925 on the inner band. No plating to chip, no base metal underneath. The silver oxidizes naturally over months, and that darkening actually sharpens the claw and cross details. A men's dragon claw ring with blue topaz that gets better looking as it ages.
If you're the kind of person who wears rings as part of your identity — musician, artist, someone who talks with their hands — this stone pulls focus from across a table. The 15mm x 20mm emerald cut throws light in clean geometric lines that contrast hard against all the organic, rough texture on the band. It's not subtle. It's not trying to be.
If you're shopping for a gift that makes someone stop mid-sentence when they open the box, a heavy sterling silver dragon ring with a stone this size delivers that moment. The weight registers before the ring even slides on. That's the kind of first impression that sticks.
What It's Like to Wear (The Honest Take)
Pick it up and the first thing that registers is cold. Sterling silver holds temperature, and 30 grams of it settling across your knuckle has a presence that's hard to ignore. Within two or three minutes, the metal warms to skin temperature and disappears — until you set your hand on a cold countertop and feel it all over again.
The band itself is where the real craftsmanship lives. Each shank carries a deeply engraved fleur-de-lis cross set into a hammered, pitted texture that looks weathered — like something pulled from a medieval armory. Between the claw base and the cross motif, there's a small round blue sapphire CZ accent stone. I didn't notice it in the product photos. Only caught it when I tilted the ring under a desk lamp. That's the kind of hidden detail that rewards a second look.
The topaz shifts color depending on your light source. Under fluorescents, it reads deep teal — almost navy at certain angles. Step outside into daylight and it opens up, pushing toward aquamarine. Where most gothic rings in this price range go all-dark-everything, this one balances cold blue brilliance against blackened silver. That contrast is what separates it.
Between the four claws, a dragon or serpent head crawls across the top edge of the bezel. Subtle chaos against all those clean facets.
Heads up: The stone sits 5–6mm above the band, and the claw prongs add more. It will catch on jacket pockets, brush against steering wheels, and snag knit fabrics. You learn to work around it within a few days. Best on the middle or index finger — on the ring finger, it crowds the neighbors.
The Specs — And What They Actually Mean
Questions You're Probably Asking
Q: Is the blue topaz stone real or synthetic?
It's a high-quality cubic zirconia cut to replicate blue topaz color and brilliance. At 36 carats, a natural stone would be museum-grade pricing. The CZ delivers the same visual impact — brilliant color, clean facets, zero inclusions — and it's scratch-resistant at 8–8.5 on the Mohs scale. Set securely in the four-prong claw setting, it won't come loose under normal wear.
Q: Does this ring run true to size?
No — size up. The band is wider than a standard ring, and wide bands fit tighter because more metal contacts your finger. If you're between sizes or you're unsure, go up half a size. A men's gothic dragon claw ring this chunky needs breathing room, especially in warm weather when fingers swell.
Q: How do I keep the silver looking good?
Sterling silver develops patina — that's normal and actually makes the textured areas look better. The polished high points (claws, cross details) can be brought back with a quick pass of a silver polishing cloth. Don't use chemical dips; they'll strip the intentional oxidation from the engraved areas and flatten the contrast.
Q: Can I wear this while riding a motorcycle?
Yes — and that's where it looks best. The weight keeps it from spinning on your finger, and the claws sit flat enough to fit under most gloves. The stone's height means tight racing gloves might press against it. Cruiser-style or open-finger gloves work perfectly.
Quick Specs & Real-World Performance
You Might Also Want
The same claw construction shows up in the clear stone dragon claw ring — same 36-carat size, same four-prong grip, but with a white CZ that reads completely different. Cooler. Almost icy.
On the wrist, the handcrafted dragon bracelet carries the same serpentine scale texture in solid sterling silver links — matched material, matched theme, without doubling up on stones.
The full range of stone colors and claw variations — garnet, black onyx, tiger's eye, and more — lives in the claw rings collection.







