Jason of Beverly Hills designs Seahawks' record Super Bowl LX ring
The Seahawks’ Super Bowl LX ring turns championship jewelry into a story object, with hidden football, 12 feathers and a mechanical Lumen Field reveal.

Championship rings are getting smarter, richer and far more narrative, and the Seattle Seahawks’ Super Bowl LX version pushes that evolution to its most elaborate form yet. Jason Arasheben and Jason of Beverly Hills built the ring in white gold with diamonds and Seahawks blue sapphires, using the architecture of Lumen Field as the visual starting point. The result is less a flat emblem of victory than a miniature architectural model, one that folds the team’s stadium, its fan base and its title run into a single piece of jewelry.
The design is dense with meaning. Fifty brilliant round white diamonds honor the Seahawks’ 50th season, a milestone that traces back to the franchise’s founding in 1976 and its 50th NFL season in 2025. Two Lombardi trophies sit in the composition, while a hidden piece of football inside the ring opens to reveal an authentic bit of the ball used during the season, marked with a 50 to tie the championship to the anniversary year. A 12 Flag button triggers the Lumen Field arches to pop out and reveal the words “WORLD CHAMPIONS,” a mechanical flourish that gives the ring a theatrical reveal rather than a static face. The bottom carries 12 feathers, a direct nod to the Seahawks’ fan base, the 12s, and the top can be worn as a pendant, extending the piece beyond the ring case and into formal jewelry territory.

The Seahawks unveiled the ring on June 11 at a private ceremony for players, coaches and staff in Seattle, about four months after the team beat the New England Patriots 29-13 in Santa Clara, California, to claim Super Bowl LX. The club says the ring was crafted entirely in the United States and is the largest Super Bowl championship ring ever made, a claim that matters because scale alone means little without the craftsmanship to carry it. Here, the technical execution is part of the message. The private presentation underscored the emotional weight of the piece, with players and staff seeing the ring for the first time as a keepsake of victory, but also as a designed object built around place, memory and identity.
Chuck Arnold said the ring “will forever represent our historic 50th season and the dedication and determination of our entire franchise,” and thanked Jason of Beverly Hills for bringing the vision to life. For championship jewelry, that is the real crossover now: the luxury value comes not just from carat count, but from how convincingly the object tells the story of the team that wore it.
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