There's a reason we attach more meaning to rings than to almost any other piece of jewellery. It's the one you catch sight of on your own hand a hundred times a day, the one that marks a proposal or an anniversary, the one people notice when you talk with your hands. So it's worth a little thought before you buy. This guide covers the ring styles worth knowing, how to match a ring to the person and the moment, how to get the size right even when it's a surprise, and how to keep silver looking its best for years rather than months.
A quick word on what we actually make. Every ring here is solid 925 sterling silver, hallmarked by BIS, and made in our own workshop rather than bought in and marked up. It carries a rhodium finish, so it stays bright and won't leave a mark on your skin, and it's nickel-free — which matters a lot if you've ever reacted to cheaper metal. If you'd rather just browse, the full silver rings collection is right here. Otherwise, read on.
Is silver a good choice for a ring you'll wear every day?
It's the question we get most, and the honest answer is yes — with one caveat worth understanding. 925 sterling silver is 92.5% pure, the same standard used for fine silver jewellery the world over. On its own, silver can tarnish; the rhodium plating we add gives it a hard, bright surface that resists that far better than untreated silver. Because our rings are solid silver rather than a thin coat over brass, they wear well, hold their value, and won't leave the green mark that plated fashion jewellery is famous for. The caveat is simple care, which we come to at the end. And because the workshop is ours, what you pay reflects the silver and the making — not a chain of middlemen.
The ring styles worth knowing
Solitaire
The solitaire is the ring most people picture first: a single stone, front and centre, with nothing to distract from it. A round cut throws the most light, while an oval or octagon reads larger on the finger for the same weight — a useful trick if you want presence without paying for size. It's the classic proposal choice, and it doesn't really date. See the solitaires here.
Halo
Want the centre stone to look bigger and the whole ring to sparkle more? A halo does exactly that — a frame of small stones around the centre that makes it read a size or two up. It's the style to reach for when you want maximum shine. Browse halo rings.
Three-stone
Three stones, usually read as past, present and future — which is why they turn up so often at anniversaries and engagements. There's a built-in sentiment to them that a single stone doesn't carry. Three-stone rings.
Toi et moi
Two stones sitting side by side — “you and me” in French. It's had a real moment lately, and it suits anyone who likes a ring with a story already built into the design. See the toi et moi edit.
Band
Plain bands are the quiet workhorses of any collection — comfortable, easy to stack, and almost impossible to get wrong for everyday wear. If you're new to wearing rings, this is where to start. Band rings.
Adjustable
When you're buying without knowing the size — a gift, a surprise, a ring for someone whose hand you've never measured — an adjustable ring saves the day. It opens to fit roughly sizes 10 to 16, so it'll sit right on almost anyone. Honestly, it's the most practical thing we sell. Adjustable rings.
Cocktail and statement
And then there are the rings made to be noticed — bigger stones, bolder settings, the ones people ask you about. Save these for occasions, or wear one when you simply feel like it. Cocktail rings.
For the milestones
We keep separate edits for the moments that matter — promise rings, proposal rings and engagement rings. One piece of advice if you're planning a surprise: choose an adjustable solitaire, so it fits perfectly on the day and there's no anxious guessing about her size.
Couples and men
There are matching couple rings for both of you, and a proper range of rings for men — heavier bands and solitaires built for daily wear, not treated as an afterthought.
Choosing a stone
Colour is where a ring stops being generic and starts being personal. Ours are set with cubic zirconia (you'll also see it called American diamond), lab-grown stones, and earth-mined natural gemstones — and we always say which is which on the product page, because you should know exactly what you're buying. If you're drawn to colour, ruby brings warmth and tradition, emerald a rich classic green, and blue sapphire real earth-origin presence. Pearl is the softer, understated option, and American diamond gives you diamond-like sparkle without the diamond price.
How to actually decide
If you'll wear it every day, lean towards a band, a simple solitaire or an adjustable ring — comfortable and low-maintenance, the kind you forget you have on. For a proposal, a solitaire or three-stone ring is hard to beat, though a natural sapphire is a lovely alternative if you'd like a real earth-origin stone. Buying a gift and unsure of the size? Adjustable, every time — it removes the one variable most likely to go wrong. And if the whole point is to be noticed, a cocktail or halo ring will do the talking for you.
What makes a great engagement ring?
An engagement ring carries more weight than anything else in this guide, so it's worth slowing down on. A few things separate a ring you'll love for decades from one that only looked good in the moment.
The stone and its cut do most of the work. A round brilliant throws the most light and is the safe, timeless choice; an oval or an emerald cut feels more distinctive and can look larger for the same weight. But size matters less than people think — what really counts is that the stone sits securely and catches light from every angle. A well-set smaller stone will always outshine a poorly set larger one.
The setting should suit how she actually lives. A solitaire is classic and snag-free for someone hands-on; a halo adds sparkle and presence; and a three-stone ring carries the past-present-future meaning many couples love. If she rarely takes her jewellery off, favour a lower, secure setting over height.
And here's the detail people forget: the ring has to fit, and a proposal is usually a surprise. An adjustable solitaire lets you propose with confidence and size it precisely afterwards — it takes the single biggest risk out of the moment. If you don't know her size, start with an adjustable design.
Finally, think about value and intent. A 925 silver engagement ring is a genuinely good choice — hallmarked, hypoallergenic and beautiful — whether it's the ring itself or a piece you propose with before choosing the final one together. Either way, you're paying for the craftsmanship, not a brand name. When you're ready, the engagement rings and proposal rings edits are the place to start. If you'd like the full walk-through, read our proposal guide.
Getting the size right
Our sizes run from 10 to 18. As a rough anchor, a size 10 is close to a US 5, with a finger circumference around 49mm. If someone falls between two sizes, go up rather than down — a slightly loose ring is far more comfortable than one that pinches, and it saves you in summer when fingers swell a little. And if you genuinely can't find out the size, don't stress over it: an adjustable ring sidesteps the problem entirely.
Keeping it looking new
Silver prefers to be kept away from perfume, hand cream and cleaning products, so put your ring on last when you're getting ready, and take it off before you swim or wash up. Store it dry — its box or a soft pouch is ideal — and a quick wipe with a soft cloth brings the shine straight back. The rhodium finish holds up well under normal wear; if it ever dulls after years of daily use, any good jeweller can re-plate it, and because the silver underneath is the real thing, the ring is always worth keeping rather than replacing. For more, see our jewellery care guide.
If it's a gift
Every ring leaves us in a gift box with a handwritten card — no upgrade, no extra charge — and you can have it sent straight to whoever it's for, with your message written inside. It's covered by our Lifetime Warranty. And if nothing in the collection is quite right, we can make something from scratch: send us a sketch, a photo, or just an idea on WhatsApp (+91 86007 18666) and we'll build it in 925 silver with the stone you want. Because we manufacture in-house, that's a normal request for us, not a special favour.
A few questions we hear often
Is silver really durable enough for daily wear?
Yes. 925 sterling silver is a proper fine-jewellery metal, and the rhodium finish helps it resist tarnish and scratching. With the simple care above, an everyday silver ring lasts for years.
Will a silver ring turn my finger black?
It shouldn't. Our rings are solid 925 silver with a rhodium finish and no nickel, so they won't discolour your skin the way plated fashion rings often do.
How do I pick a size for a surprise?
Choose an adjustable ring. It fits roughly sizes 10 to 16, so you can buy with confidence without ever measuring their finger.
What's the difference between CZ, lab-grown and natural stones?
CZ (American diamond) is a man-made diamond look-alike; lab-grown stones are real gemstones grown in a lab; natural stones are earth-mined. We label which one every ring uses so there are no surprises.
Can you make a ring to my own design?
Yes — it's one of the things we do that most online brands can't, because the workshop is ours. Send your idea on WhatsApp and we'll build it in 925 silver with your choice of stone.
Do your rings come with a warranty and gift box?
Every ring is BIS hallmarked, ships in a gift box with a handwritten card, and carries a Lifetime Warranty against manufacturing defects.
Explore the full silver rings collection →

