Design

Jason of Beverly Hills turns Seahawks championship ring into a storytelling symbol

Jason of Beverly Hills turned the Seahawks’ Super Bowl LX ring into a coded archive of the season, hiding game-used football, stadium arches, and 17 wins in white gold.

Rachel Levy··4 min read
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Jason of Beverly Hills turns Seahawks championship ring into a storytelling symbol
Source: nationaljeweler.com

Fans rarely see how every stone placement maps to a moment, but the Seahawks’ Super Bowl LX ring does exactly that. Unveiled at a private team ceremony in Seattle on Thursday night, June 11, 2026, the white-gold piece condenses a 29-13 win over the New England Patriots into diamonds, blue sapphires, and a hidden fragment of game-used football.

Designed and manufactured in Los Angeles by Jason of Beverly Hills, the ring reads less like a piece of celebratory hardware than a miniature archive of the franchise. It carries 50 diamonds for the Seahawks’ 50th season, two Lombardi Trophy replicas for the championships, 12 feathers for the fan base, and the inside inscription “17 WINS,” a direct tally of the team’s combined regular-season and postseason victories.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

A ring that translates Seattle into form

The visual language is anchored in materials that do real narrative work. White gold gives the ring its cool, architectural finish, while diamonds and blue sapphires echo the arches of Lumen Field, linking the object to the stadium where the Seahawks’ identity is staged in front of the crowd. That choice matters because championship jewelry is strongest when it feels place-specific, not generic, and this ring understands Seattle as both setting and symbol.

The Seahawks also used the ring to keep fan culture visible, not just celebratory. Twelve feathers point to the 12s, the fan base that has long been folded into the team’s identity, while the twin Lombardi replicas place the 2026 title in the longer arc of the franchise’s championship history. The result is a ring that does what the best sports jewelry should do: make memory legible in metal and stone.

The mechanism is part of the message

The most striking detail is the 12 Flag button, which activates a mechanism that makes the Lumen Field arches pop outward to reveal “WORLD CHAMPIONS.” That is more than a theatrical flourish. Seahawks.com describes the system as relying on multiple levers and spring systems developed over months, a reminder that in high jewelry, movement has to be engineered with the same seriousness as setting and polish.

The top of the ring can also be fully removed and converted into a pendant worn on a chain, which gives the piece a second life beyond the finger. Hidden beneath that removable section is a piece of the football used during the season, a detail that shifts the ring from commemorative object to intimate relic. In luxury jewelry terms, the engineering is doing the emotional work: the better the mechanism, the more clearly the meaning lands.

How the ring was made

Jason of Beverly Hills says production took three months and moved through concept development, CAD engineering, stone sourcing, casting, hand setting, polishing, and quality control. That sequence matters because championship jewelry like this is not simply decorated after the fact; the storytelling has to be designed into the architecture from the start. A moving top, a removable pendant element, and a hidden compartment for game-used material all require the kind of precision usually reserved for fine watchmaking.

Jason Arasheben, who founded Jason of Beverly Hills in 2002, described the project as deeply collaborative, shaped through meetings with team leadership, creative staff, and players including Cooper Kupp and Jaxon Smith-Njigba. Seahawks president Chuck Arnold said the ring would forever represent the franchise’s historic 50th season and the dedication of the entire organization. That combination of executive oversight and player input is what keeps the object from feeling like a brand exercise; it feels like a team artifact built from the inside out.

Why the 2014 ring still matters as a comparison

The Seahawks’ earlier championship ring, made by Tiffany & Co. for Super Bowl XLVIII, offers a revealing benchmark. Presented at the EMP Museum in downtown Seattle, it featured a diamond-filled Seahawks logo, a Vince Lombardi Trophy, and Seattle-themed details, with input from Paul Allen, Pete Carroll, John Schneider, Peter McLoughlin, and other executives. It was a statement ring, but one grounded in classic championship symbolism.

The new ring goes further. Where the 2014 piece leaned on emblem and trophy, the 2026 design introduces motion, concealment, and conversion, turning the object into something closer to a story device than a badge. Jason of Beverly Hills has made championship rings for other title teams, but Seattle’s version stands out for how completely it fuses luxury craft with team mythology.

In the end, the Seahawks ring proves that the most compelling sports jewelry is not just worn, it is read. Every diamond count, every hidden hinge, and every engraved phrase turns the season into a physical language, and that is what makes this ring feel less like a souvenir than a symbol.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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