The Basic Ring Blank Formula
The most common way to calculate ring blank length is to use the inside diameter of the finished ring, add the metal thickness, and multiply the result by pi.
This works because the calculation estimates the length around the middle of the metal strip, rather than only the inside edge of the ring.
Example Calculation
If the inside diameter of the ring is 17.3 mm and the metal thickness is 1.0 mm, the calculation looks like this:
17.3 mm + 1.0 mm = 18.3 mm
18.3 mm × 3.1416 = 57.49 mm
Cut the ring blank approximately 57.5 mm long.
When To Add Extra Length
For wider bands, the ring can behave slightly differently during forming, soldering and finishing. As a practical bench adjustment, many jewelers add about 0.5 mm extra when the band is wider than 4 mm.
What Measurements You Need
- The target inside diameter of the finished ring
- The metal thickness of your strip or sheet
- The band width, especially if the band is wider than 4 mm
- A small allowance for filing, solder cleanup or personal workflow
Common Mistakes
- Using only the inside circumference without adding metal thickness
- Forgetting that wide rings often need a small adjustment
- Measuring metal thickness inaccurately
- Cutting too short before filing and solder preparation
- Assuming every metal and every forming method behaves exactly the same
Use The Calculator
The easiest way to avoid mistakes is to use the Jewelry Calculator and generate the ring blank length directly from your measurements.