Enri Mars shapes metal the way geological time shapes stone: slowly, by hand, in an Imola workshop where lost-wax casting is still practiced as inherited discipline. This cuff begins as sculpted wax, then transforms through fire into a single unbroken arc of sterling silver. The round tubular profile carries real heft -- you feel its presence against the wrist bone, a constant reminder that you are wearing something forged rather than manufactured.
The surface is matte and smooth under the thumb, finished by hand to a state that sits between raw and refined -- faithful to the Wabi-Sabi principle that perfection is less honest than the mark of a maker's hand. At each open terminal, a black diamond is set flush into the silver face. Not mounted. Not displayed. Buried, like mineral deposits visible only to those who look closely enough. This is Enri Mars's Kintsugi sensibility applied to gemstones: the most precious element is the most hidden.
The open design allows the cuff to be adjusted within a gentle range, conforming to the wrist over time. Sterling silver develops a personal patina with wear -- high-contact surfaces lighten while recessed areas deepen. The cuff you put on today will not look the same in six months. That evolution is not a flaw. It is the philosophy made visible.



