The Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl LX ring hit the timeline this morning and immediately lived up to the hype. A new video posted by the team gives fans that closer look at the hardware players received during a private ceremony in Seattle on June 11. Light rakes across the surface and the whole thing comes alive.
This is the largest Super Bowl championship ring ever made. It was designed and built by Jason of Beverly Hills in Los Angeles, and every detail was chosen to mark the franchise’s second Lombardi Trophy and its 50th season.
The Diamonds That Make It Pop
The ring is adorned with an intricate arrangement of round, emerald-cut, and marquise-cut white diamonds carefully set to maximize brilliance and celebrate the team’s championship achievement.
Round stones throw classic fire from every angle. Emerald cuts bring depth and clean geometry. Marquise cuts stretch the light into sharp, elongated flashes. Together they create a surface that feels like it is still moving even when the ring sits still on a table. Seahawks blue sapphires sit at the center alongside two Lombardi Trophies, one for each title in franchise history.
Fifty Diamonds for Fifty Years
Fifty brilliant round white diamonds encircle the center logo, a direct nod to the 1976 founding of the team. The number is not just decorative. It sits right there on the face of the ring so nobody forgets what this season represented for the organization and the city.
A closer look at the Super Bowl LX ring 💍
Learn more » https://t.co/mS9R5VrQiQ pic.twitter.com/zxSXKEgdMT
— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) June 12, 2026
Personal Marks and the 12s
Each player’s ring carries his last name and number on one shank along with the team mantra “M.O.B.” The opposite side shows the vision “12 AS ONE,” the Seattle skyline, the year, and the Super Bowl LX logo. At the bottom, twelve feathers pay tribute to the fans who turned Lumen Field into one of the loudest buildings in football.
The Button That Changes Everything
Press the 12 Flag on the side and the Lumen Field arches, already studded with diamonds, pop outward to reveal the words “WORLD CHAMPIONS.” The mechanism took months of engineering and multiple rounds of testing to get right. It is one of the most technically advanced features ever built into a Super Bowl ring.
Open the ring and you find an authentic piece of game-used football from the season, marked with the number 50. Inside the band, “17 WINS” is engraved. The entire top section also detaches so the ring can be worn as a pendant on a chain.
What the Ceremony Felt Like
Players, coaches, and staff gathered privately on June 11 to receive the rings for the first time. You can picture the room: quiet at first, then the low sound of boxes opening, then the quick intake of breath when the first ring caught the light. For a group that went through the full 2025 grind and walked off Levi’s Stadium with a 29-13 win over the Patriots, this was the moment the work turned into something you can hold.
Seahawks president Chuck Arnold called the ring a lasting symbol of the historic 50th season and the dedication of the entire franchise. Jason Arasheben of Jason of Beverly Hills said the goal was never just another piece of jewelry. The team wanted a permanent time capsule.
Why It Hits Different in June
Training camp is still weeks away. OTAs are over. The roster is already looking ahead to whatever comes next. But right now the ring sits on fingers and in display cases as proof. The 12s who packed the stands all year, the players who kept showing up, the coaches who drew up the plan — all of it is captured in metal, stone, and one very clever hidden mechanism.
The video the Seahawks posted this morning does exactly what it promises. It gives you the closer look. Once you see how the diamonds catch the light and how the arches move when you press that flag, the whole season feels a little more real again.
