The oldest known jewellery predates the supposed birth of civilisation by over 100,000 years.    

 We speak of progress, yet the further back we look, the more we find evidence of intelligence, refinement, and meaning.

Much of that wisdom has been ignored or destroyed.  My work begins from a place of respect for the knowledge that has been lost.
The stones are chosen carefully, not only for their beauty, but for their energetic qualities.
 Some stones are not neutral. These are steady, grounding, and safe for all wearers.

 The symbols are not decorative. They are old marks, used across cultures for protection, clarity, and strength.

 They are placed quietly, often on the inside of each piece, where they sit close to the body.
Each piece is carved, cast, and finished by hand using traditional techniques.  Slowly, simply, and with attention.  Each element is considered.
I use the lost wax process, a method developed thousands of years ago and still used today for its precision and depth.

This is quiet work. Rooted in respect, for process, for material, and for the knowledge that came before

the creator, eliane

  • I’m an artist who loves the natural world and ancient cultures.

    I studied sculpture in Florence and trained in traditional wax carving techniques in India. I’ve always been drawn to traditional ways of making and the knowledge that craft holds.

    I’m a naturalist. I spend a lot of time observing animals, plants, and materials. I’m from the UK, and I’ve always been drawn to its old traditions; its symbols, rituals, and rich pagan roots, and I like weaving these together with histories from other parts of the world.

    Whenever I can, I make. I carve, I paint, I shape. Jewellery became part of that naturally—carving wax into a small, meaningful, wearable object really fulfils me.

    I often use stones and old symbols—things that have been part of human life for a long time. Not for decoration, but because they’ve always had a purpose. In many traditions, jewellery was made to protect, to support, to hold something close to the body. I try to honour that, quietly.

    I just like making things—and I like making them properly.
    I try to put the little I’ve learnt into the things I make.

Thank you and I hope you enjoy the collection, any questions please ask.