Mejuri Adds Sterling Silver to Puzzle Line, Expanding Stacking Options and Accessibility
Sterling silver joins Mejuri's Puzzle stacking line with 14 birthstone rings from $118, unlocking two-tone stacks and a cooler entry point into the brand's modular system.

A single sterling silver band dropped into a stack of 18k gold vermeil Puzzle rings changes the visual register of the whole hand. The cool, bright white of sterling reads against the warm amber of gold vermeil not as a mistake but as contrast, and Mejuri engineered the Puzzle collection so that contrast is always intentional: every band is shaped to sit flush against the next, regardless of metal.
The Toronto-based brand, founded in 2015 by CEO and co-founder Noura Sakkijha, a third-generation jeweler, expanded its Puzzle collection to include sterling silver, introducing 14 birthstone rings priced between $118 and $128 and a new series of Puzzle slider charms at $128 to $158. The line had previously been offered exclusively in 18k gold vermeil; silver's arrival doesn't alter the collection's modular geometry, but it meaningfully changes what that geometry can say.
The silver rings start at $118, making each piece the most accessible entry point into the Puzzle line to date, and the modular design means adding one silver piece doesn't require replacing or reconsidering what came before. That frictionless integration is what makes the styling argument interesting rather than merely commercial.
Silver's cooler undertone is genuinely complementary to the way most people dress day-to-day. Against denim, a white cotton tee, or grey knitwear, sterling reads sharper and more contemporary than yellow gold. Four silver Puzzle birthstone rings stacked in close succession, their unified cool finish catching light evenly, deliver a clean hand that needs nothing else: the all-silver stack is the most direct expression of the line's minimalist premise, and the one most at home with a pared-back wardrobe.

The more considered styling argument lives in the mixed-metal stack. Two or three silver birthstone rings interspersed with one or two gold vermeil Puzzle bands create contrast that reads as intentional precisely because the Puzzle fit system keeps every band in its engineered alignment. Silver and gold planes alternate in sequence rather than drifting or gapping, giving the combination an almost architectural rhythm. This is the stack for Saturday night as readily as Monday morning.
Pearl and diamond birthstone options within the silver range extend that range further. A silver stack anchored by the April birthstone, diamond however modest in scale, introduces a point of sparkle at a fraction of the cost of a dedicated diamond band. The June birthstone in pearl brings an almost architectural softness to an otherwise cool-metal look, bridging silver bands in a way that renders the whole stack less utilitarian and more sculptural. Slider charms, at $128 to $158, add another variable, letting the wearer shift visual weight along the band and introduce dimensionality to an otherwise uniform profile.
The business logic is consistent with how customers have always engaged with the Puzzle line: multiple pieces at once is the norm, and each new metal or stone option extends the range of adjacent purchases without requiring commitment to a single aesthetic direction from the start. Sterling silver, in that system, is less a new product category than a new sentence in a grammar most Puzzle buyers are already fluent in.
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