Golden Honeycomb Ring - Titanium Honeycomb Wedding Band with Gold Resin and Meteorite
A hive of liquid gold and ancient space rock wrapped around your finger.
The Golden Honeycomb is a one-of-a-kind men's wedding band built on our signature honeycomb titanium frame, a band of hexagonal cells that wraps fully around the finger. Each cell is filled with a layered inlay of rich gold resin and authentic meteorite, giving the ring a warm metallic depth that catches the light from every angle.
The gold resin pools inside hexagon cells with a deep, molten character that reads like liquid metal frozen mid-pour. Scattered through the resin are fragments of real Campo Del Cielo meteorite, an iron-nickel space rock pulled from a strewn field in northern Argentina that fell to Earth thousands of years ago. The dark metallic flecks contrast beautifully against the gold, adding a cosmic texture to each cell of the hive.
The titanium honeycomb frame keeps the band lightweight and structurally clean, with each hexagonal border defining the inlay sharply. The result is a ring with a strong geometric foundation and a rich, warm centerpiece, a piece that feels equally at home as a wedding band or as an everyday statement ring. The brushed titanium exterior frames the gold cells cleanly, letting the inlay carry the visual weight.
Materials and Origins
- Gold Resin: rich molten gold poured individually into each hexagonal cell
- Meteorite: authentic Campo Del Cielo meteorite from northern Argentina, an iron-nickel space rock
- Titanium Band: lightweight, durable, and hypoallergenic
Product Specifications
- Band Material: Titanium
- Band Width: 8mm
- Profile: Honeycomb cells around the full circumference
- Comfort fit interior
- Includes a Stainless Steel Certificate of Authenticity
Handcrafted for You
Every Golden Honeycomb is made to order by hand in our California studio, with each cell filled individually so no two rings are identical. Order yours today and we'll build it specifically for your finger size and ready it for shipment.





