Color is the fastest way to shortlist a ring. Cool tones read calm and classic: blue jewelry pieces lean on lapis lazuli (Mohs 5-6), London blue topaz, and Sleeping Beauty turquoise, while green jewelry draws from malachite, peridot, and chrome diopside for softer, leaf-toned rings.
Warm tones carry more visual weight. Red jewelry centers on garnet (Mohs 7-7.5) and red coral, both used in ring-making for centuries across South Asia and the Mediterranean. Yellow jewelry pulls in citrine and amber, while purple jewelry leans on amethyst from Brazil and Uruguay, a quartz variety with a Mohs hardness of 7 that holds up to daily wear.
For softer palettes, pink jewelry covers rose quartz and pink tourmaline, and neutral stacks come together with black jewelry in onyx or obsidian. Each subcategory page filters further by stone, size, and shape, so you can move from a color idea to a specific ring in a few clicks.
New stones and settings arrive every few weeks. If you have a color in mind but are not sure which stone suits you, start with the hardness notes and care tips on each subcategory page, then narrow by ring size.
Any sterling silver ring set with a natural stone whose color drives the design. We group these rings by dominant hue rather than by stone type, so you can shop the way you dress.
Yes. Every ring uses genuine natural gemstones set in .925 sterling silver. Treatments such as standard heat or stabilization are disclosed on the product page when they apply.
Look at stones with a Mohs hardness of 7 or higher for rings worn often, including amethyst, citrine, garnet, and topaz. Softer stones like turquoise, malachite, and lapis work well for occasional wear.
Yes. Standard US shipping is free on every order, with no minimum.