Dog Tag Pendants — the Military Silhouette in Civilian Wear
The dog tag started as identification. Issued to soldiers in the late 1800s, stamped with name, rank, service number. Designed to survive whatever happened to the soldier — to be pulled from the field, to identify the body, to send the news home.
By World War II the shape had settled: rounded rectangle, 5cm × 2.8cm, hole at the top for a chain, embossed with name and blood type. That shape didn't change for the next eighty years.
And somewhere in the 1980s, the dog tag walked off the parade ground and into civilian wear. First in punk and hardcore — the dog tag as anti-establishment statement. Then in early 2000s streetwear — the dog tag as bold visible pendant. Now, in 2026, the dog tag sits in the wardrobes of men who never served and don't pretend to — the silhouette divorced from the military meaning, kept for the shape itself.
Monrich runs the dog tag in 18K gold PVD plated over solid stainless steel. Close to military spec on size and shape. Engraveable on the front face for personalisation — name, blood type, contact, or the line you live by.
Single Tag, Double Tag, Engraved, Blank — Four Ways to Wear It
The single dog tag is the everyday wear. One pendant on a 6mm or 8mm Cuban chain at 55–60cm length, sits flat at the sternum. The chain reads chunky-but-not-loud, the pendant reads statement-but-not-flashy. The most popular configuration in the catalogue.
The double dog tag carries two pendants on the same chain — the historical military format. One larger tag and one smaller tag, often tied together with a silencer (the rubber sleeve that stopped the tags from clinking in the field). Reads more streetwear, more layered, more deliberate.
Engraved or blank both ship. The engraving format runs up to four lines at 18 characters per line — typically name, contact, blood type, or a personal phrase. Common engravings include a child's name and date of birth, a wedding date, a single word that matters (mother's name, a deceased friend, a verse), the military-style format of NAME / SERVICE NUMBER / BLOOD TYPE / RELIGION.
18K Gold PVD on a Real Stainless Base
The cheap dog tag market uses zinc alloy or aluminium with a thin gold-tone spray. Fades in weeks, dents at any pressure, snaps the chain attachment at the first catch on a t-shirt seam. The dog tag ends up in a drawer.
Monrich uses surgical-grade stainless steel — the same grade used in medical implants — at full military spec thickness. The PVD plating bonds real 18K gold to the steel grain at a molecular level. The result is a tag that holds its shape through gravel, gym equipment, and pocket carry, with a gold finish that holds colour for years.
The engraving is laser-cut into the steel before the PVD process runs, so the text reads sharp and the plating fills into the cut channels rather than over them. The engraving never wears through — five years in, the name and date are still as crisp as the day it shipped.
Wear It Solo. Or Pair It With a Cross.
The dog tag works strongest worn alone. The shape is statement enough that adding a second pendant tends to crowd the chest — the eye doesn't know where to land. One dog tag, one chain, that's the look.
For a layered configuration, run the dog tag at 60cm and a smaller piece on a separate chain at 50cm — a small cross pendant, an initial disc, a name plate. The 10cm offset prevents the chains from tangling and keeps both pendants visible at different heights on the chest.
For the full pendant range — cross, dog tag, personalised, initial, coordinate — see all pendants. For the streetwear styling angle on the dog tag, see streetwear.
Or just buy the standard engraved dog tag on the 6mm Cuban chain at 55cm. That's what most men do. It becomes the pendant they wear for years.
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