Hall of Legends

2026

A pair of wedding rings with a WWII scene in the background, featuring soldiers raising a flag. The image has the text 'Blood & Iron' at the top and 'Because Ordinary Was Never The Goal' at the bottom.

Some rings are built to look powerful.
Others are built to carry power.

BLOOD & IRON was never created to be ordinary.

It was forged from fragments of history — pieces of sacrifice, resilience, and the men who stood their ground when the world demanded everything from them.

At its core rests wood reclaimed from a World War II M1 Garand stock — the rifle carried by American soldiers through some of the darkest battles in modern history. The worn grain of that wood once traveled through mud, smoke, fear, and courage.

Embedded within the inlay are fragments of steel from a Sherman tank — machines built not for comfort, but for survival. Heavy. Relentless. Unstoppable.

Set into the composition is authentic black volcanic sand from Iwo Jima, forever tied to one of the most brutal and defining battles of the Pacific theater. Every grain represents a sacrifice paid for inch by inch.

Woven into the ring are pieces of Purple Heart wood — deep crimson and violet tones chosen to reflect the cost of service and the honor carried by those wounded or lost in battle.

And then there is the stripe.

A single red blood stripe runs through the ring.

Not as decoration.

As remembrance.

Inspired by the blood stripe worn on the dress blue trousers of the United States Marines, the line honors those who fell at the Battle of Chapultepec in 1847. Over time, it became more than part of a uniform — it became a symbol carried by generations willing to stand between chaos and the people behind them.

When light fades, a faint red, white, and blue glow begins to emerge from within the ring itself — subtle, almost hidden — like the spirit of those who never truly leave the fight.

BLOOD & IRON is not a fashion piece.

It is a tribute.

A ring built from sacrifice, forged from history, and created for those who understand that freedom was never free.

Because Ordinary Was Never The Goal.