A Fine Jewellery Collection
KINTSUGI
where the broken places become golden
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The Japanese art of kintsugi repairs broken pottery with gold — honouring the fractures, not hiding them. This collection was born from that same philosophy: that our hardest moments leave seams of gold, and that emerging from the cracks is its own kind of radiance.
Wabi Solitaire
The ring that begins the story. A single cushion-cut amethyst sits in a cradle of yellow gold, its setting deliberately split — two halves joined by a thin vein of gold running through the band. The break is visible. That is the point.
"What broke you open
was also what let the light in."
Persistence Pendant
Through the hardest season, something continues to burn. This pendant holds a rose-cut diamond in a kite-shaped gold frame, edged with three small amethysts at each point. A single hairline of gold cuts through the stone — not a flaw, but a signature.
"Even in the dark, the diamond
still holds the light it was given."
Open Cuff
The cuff is intentionally open — a reminder that recovery is not a closed circle but an open arc. Amethysts graduate along the band from deepest violet to pale lilac, like bruises fading. Diamond chips scatter across the surface like new light finding its way through.
"The opening is not a wound.
It is a window."
Cascade Earrings
The final piece. Three amethysts graduate down a golden wire, deepening in colour as they descend — pale lilac at the top, royal violet at the base — as if the gem is remembering its full strength. A single brilliant diamond drop catches light at the end, the final exhale.
"This is what it looks like
to finally come back to yourself."
THE COLLECTION
You are not broken.
You are gilded.
Kintsugi does not pretend the break never happened. It says: the break is part of the story, and the story is beautiful.
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