A versatile patterning approach based on electron-beam lithography (eBL) and solution deposition, termed soft-eBL, has been developed to fabricate radially stacked heterostructures of multifunctional oxides from their sol precursors. Well-defined nanorings of lead zirconate titanate (PZT) are fabricated on a variety of substrates such as noble metals (e.g., Au), semiconductors (e.g., Si), and oxide single crystals (e.g., SrTiO3), which were previously functionalized with appropriate self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). The undercut in the double-layer eBL resist and substrate functionalization with the SAM treatment play a vital role in the formation of the ring structures. The nanorings are then used as building block "containers" and ring-reservoirs are filled with a second sol (e.g., CoFe2O4) to form radially stacked composite ceramic heterostructures. The approach presented here does not require either feature alignment to realize heterostructures or the etching of ceramics, and is amenable to a variety of radially stacked composite heterostructures.