A deep blue zircon set into oxidized S925 silver, framed by a textured rim and held with an 18G screw-on post.
The stone is not a clean sky blue. It is darker than that — closer to water after sundown, blue ink under glass, a color that catches light without giving everything away. The surface flashes in small places when you move, then falls back into shadow.
Around it, the aged silver does not try to brighten the stone. The rim is textured, uneven, almost worn from touch. The side of the setting carries carved silver details that only show when the stud turns away from the front. That side view matters: it makes the piece feel like metalwork, not just a stone setting.
At 6.5mm, it stays close to the lobe. Small enough for every day. Dark enough to have a point of view.
You wear it with a black tee, a heavy jacket, hair tucked back without thinking. Someone catches the blue for half a second. Not bright. Not sweet. Just deep enough to make them look again.