The Seahawks received their Super Bowl ring in a private celebration four months after hundreds of thousands of fans packed downtown Seattle for a parade in February. The new piece is built around the franchise’s Super Bowl LX win over the Patriots, and it is the largest Super Bowl championship ring ever made.
That is the version of a title celebration that starts in the street and ends behind closed doors. The team’s public victory lap came first, with fans lining the downtown route months earlier. Now the keepsake has arrived, and it is not a standard reminder of a championship. The ring was designed by Jason of Beverly Hills and carries a 12 Flag button that makes the Lumen Field arches pop out to reveal the words WORLD CHAMPIONS.
At the top sits the Seahawks logo beside two Lombardi Trophies, one for each of the club’s Super Bowl titles. The logo is ringed by 50 diamonds, a nod to the team winning in its 50th season, while the inside includes an authentic piece of football from the season, the number 50 and 17 WINS, marking the total across the regular season and postseason. On the bottom, 12 feathers honor the 12s, and the top can be removed from the base and worn as a pendant.
Jason Arasheben, who founded Jason of Beverly Hills in 2002, said the Seahawks ring was shaped through a collaborative process inside the organization. He said he has made 26 different championship rings and worked on four Super Bowl champions, but this one involved meetings with Chuck Arnold, Tyson Fladreau, the creative department, Cooper Kupp and Jaxon Smith-Njigba. Arasheben said the goal was to understand what mattered most to the people in the building, and Arnold said the ring will forever represent the team’s historic 50th season.
That private presentation also puts a different frame on the public celebration that came before it. The parade in February belonged to the city. The ring belongs to the locker room, but it still carries the same thread: a title season, a fan base that showed up in force and a design that reaches from the 12s to the franchise’s second championship. What remains unknown is whether the team will turn the ring unveiling into another public moment, or leave this one where it began, inside the organization.
