About Us
My mother lived to 96. She wore copper every single day.
She never took it off. Not when she bathed. Not when she slept. Not even on her wedding day.
We called it superstition. She called it tradition.
She had grown up with copper jewellery against her skin — just as her mother had, and her grandmother before her. To her it wasn't merely a piece of jewellery. It was a daily ritual. Something quiet, simple and almost forgotten, that connected her to generations of women before us.
For many years I dismissed it. I listened, but I didn't quite understand. It was only as I grew older myself that I truly began to look at her. Not just as my mother, but as a woman who had carried something with her all her life — a tradition, a calm, and a connection to something greater than herself.
She used to say:
“You stopped wearing copper and started wondering why everything feels harder.”
Back then I simply smiled at it. Today I wear her copper bracelet on my own wrist.
It's too late to tell her she may have been right. But it's not too late to carry the tradition forward.
My name is Carla, and every single piece I make begins with the same intention: to create something that isn't just bought, but worn, used and treasured.
Copper has been worn directly against the skin for thousands of years — by Egyptian queens, Roman soldiers and generations of women before us. Quietly, every single day, close to the body.
I've been handcrafting copper jewellery for 33 years. Over the years I've seen customers return again and again — not just for how the jewellery looks, but for the feeling of wearing something real, timeless and meaningful.
What began as a craft became, over time, something I can only describe as a calling. But now my grandchildren are growing up, and for the first time in 33 years there is something that matters more to me than the work.
That is why this collection is limited.
Every piece is made by my own hands, one at a time. I can only make a small number, and once they're gone, I won't make any more.
This isn't mass production. It's craftsmanship. It's tradition. It's a small piece of history, made to be carried on.
– Carla