Objects

Reworked and recomposed, materials hold overlapping memories: the geological time of their formation and the human gestures of craft that reshape them.

Their meeting evokes both preservation and transformation, asking how memory lingers when elements are extracted, refined, and given new form. By fusing what is found with what is made, the work reflects on the intimacy of craftsmanship, the ethics of resource extraction, and the quiet persistence of matter itself.

What Remains

Paper, sterling silver, stones, glass, 50x20x25cm, 2025

I was always fascinated by the stacks of jewels my grandmother would wear, how the rings would turn around her fingers as she’d cook, how her earrings would shine as she’d smile, how her necklaces would softly chime as she’d dance.
Her love for jewels always fascinated me and fed my curiosity. Wearing them made me feel safe and powerful in uncomfortable moments. Now they remind me of her.


This installation reflects grief: a process of remembering loved ones through memories that we attach to belongings. With time, life grows around loss, and with it, our memories fade.

Memories of Nature

Sterling silver, crystals, wooden base 30 x 30 cm, 2025

Memories of Nature brings together fragments of silver and crystals salvaged from riverbeds, each carrying traces of the places and histories they once inhabited.

Every piece tells a story

If a design inspires you and you’d like to collaborate on a unique version of your own, I’d love to hear from you.