Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Silver Jewellery

Quieter than gold. Sharper than people think. For the man who's already worn gold and wants the cooler tone, or the man who started in jewellery yesterday and isn't ready for the warmth yet. Monrich silver in solid 925 sterling silver or PVD-finished stainless steel. Anti-tarnish. Hypoallergenic. Built for daily wear.

Currently Buy One Get One Free — applied automatically at checkout.

GoldChainsRingsMinimalist

Sort by

7 products

Filters

Make Your Own Set (Silver) Sale price€128,95
Curb Bracelet Sterling Sale priceFrom €46,95
Statement Vitruvian Ring Sale price€81,95
Curb Chain Sterling Sale priceFrom €46,95
Tennis Chain Silver Sale priceFrom €57,95
Rope Chain Silver Sale priceFrom €49,95
Cuban Chain Silver Sale priceFrom €41,95
✦ ✦ ✦
✦ ✦ ✦

Men's Silver Jewellery — Quieter, Sharper, Older Than Gold

Silver was at the throat and the wrist for two thousand years before gold became affordable enough to wear daily. Pre-gold, pre-platinum, silver carried weight on men's hands and necks. The Romans wore it. The Vikings wore it. The Edwardians wore it.

And it never quite left. Silver is the quiet alternative to gold — the cool grey-white finish that reads as subtle rather than statement, considered rather than loud. The men who wear silver tend to be men who already wore gold and got tired of the warmth, or men who started in jewellery yesterday and aren't ready for the visibility of gold yet.

Monrich silver runs in two builds. Solid 925 sterling silver for the classic pieces — the same standard as fine silver jewellery, hallmarked, the silver alloy that has been the standard for two hundred years. PVD-finished surgical-grade stainless steel for the chains and bracelets that need the extra durability for shower-and-gym daily wear. Both finishes are anti-tarnish and hypoallergenic.

Cuban Chains, Signets, ID Bars, Beaded — the Full Catalogue in Silver

Every shape that exists in the gold catalogue exists in silver. Cuban link chains in 6mm to 10mm widths — the silver Cuban is heavier per gram than the gold-plated equivalent because the silver is solid through. Signet rings — engraveable, blank-face, or with a stone set into the centre. ID bar bracelets — adjustable 18cm to 22cm. Beaded bracelets paired with a single silver bead rather than gold.

The sterling pieces carry the standard 925 hallmark — visible on the inside of rings, stamped on the clasp of chains. The stainless pieces use a PVD process — the same chemistry as the gold collection, just deposited in silver tone rather than 18K gold.

Sterling Silver vs PVD Stainless — Which to Buy

Sterling silver is the right buy if: you want the heritage build, you want a piece that develops a patina over years, you want the proper fine-jewellery hallmark, you don't mind a five-minute polish twice a year. Most men who already own silver want sterling.

PVD-finished stainless is the right buy if: you want zero maintenance, you wear your jewellery through shower and gym daily, you want the brightest possible silver tone without any chance of tarnish. Most men starting in silver want stainless.

Both are valid. Neither is the cheap option — both run the same price range as the gold catalogue.

Stay Silver, or Mix With One Gold Piece

The cleanest silver looks commit fully — silver chain, silver ring, silver bracelet, no gold anywhere. The look reads as deliberate, minimal, considered. The kind of jewellery men wear when they don't want jewellery to be the loudest thing in the outfit.

The two-tone look — silver plus one gold piece — works when the proportions are right. A silver Cuban chain at the throat with a single gold signet on the little finger. A silver ID bar on one wrist with a gold Cuban bracelet on the other. The trick is one tone dominates and the other appears once as the deliberate accent.

For the gold equivalents, see the gold jewellery collection. For the minimal end of silver, see the minimalist edit — thin silver chains, plain silver bands, small silver studs.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Monrich silver actually made from?
Two builds. Solid 925 sterling silver for the classic pieces — same standard as fine jewellery, hallmarked, the silver men have worn for two centuries. PVD-finished surgical-grade stainless steel for the chains and bracelets that need extra durability for shower-and-gym daily wear. Both finishes are hypoallergenic.
Will the silver tarnish? I had a silver chain that turned grey in months.
That was probably an alloy with copper that oxidised against skin sulphur. Sterling silver does tarnish slowly — that's the chemistry. Monrich applies an anti-tarnish rhodium flash to the sterling pieces, which delays the oxidation by years rather than months. The PVD-finished stainless pieces don't tarnish at all — they're not silver-metal underneath, so the chemistry doesn't apply. Choose stainless if you want zero maintenance. Choose sterling if you want the patina that develops over years of wear.
Can I shower with it?
Stainless pieces: yes, rated for shower, pool, gym, sleep. Sterling silver pieces: water-safe, but prolonged exposure accelerates the natural patina. Rinse and dry the sterling pieces after the gym for longer life. The chain that ages from showering is the sterling one — and many men prefer that aged look.
Is silver more or less expensive than gold-plated?
Sterling silver pieces price similar to PVD-plated gold at the same width — both run £40 to £150 for the daily-wear range. PVD-finished stainless pieces sit at the lower end. Solid sterling is the pricier silver build because the metal cost is real silver throughout, not a layer over a base.
Can I mix silver and gold pieces?
Yes — the two-tone look reads as deliberate styling rather than accidental mismatch. A silver chain with a gold ring. A gold ID bar with a silver Cuban link bracelet. Monrich finishes both tones to match in width and profile, so the two pieces sit together visually rather than competing. The cleanest two-tone looks pair one tone at the throat with the other tone on the wrist or finger — not both tones in the same place.
Is silver hypoallergenic for sensitive skin?
Yes. 925 sterling silver is one of the safest metals for sensitive skin — only confirmed silver-allergic individuals should avoid it. The PVD-finished stainless pieces are also nickel-safe in skin-contact surfaces. For men who can't normally wear cheap jewellery without itching, Monrich silver will sit on the wrist without reaction.