Infinity Coral Bracelet

$82.50

I fixed the INFINITE geometric motif, slightly raised to the scales of stone, which are freely piled on the wrist. 925 sterling silver lock is a sliding and magnet system that I designed and produced for this bracelet series. Coral sequences were stacked on a special string with faceted cutting and a special string technique in seven rows. Infinity is a concept beyond the perception limits of many of us. My choice to interpret infinity in a geometric motif and transfer it to my design was again the decoration world of Seljuk. I wanted to feel the sense of eternity reflected by the seas by using the motif I interpreted with the coral.
Coral, 925 sterling silver geometric pattern bracelet
wrist circumference: 17.5 cm
Stone string width: 2.5 cm

ZOYA
Born in 1960, Hülya Öz completed her architectural education at ITU. She practiced as a practicing architect for nearly 30 years. While studying material research and various application techniques in architecture, she also took loyalty lessons from his teacher Serdar Şeremet to the extent allowed by her professional activities. Over the years she has continued to learn traditional and modern jewelry manufacturing techniques. The architect, who had an appreciation especially for anatolian Seljuk civilization, made frequent research trips to Anatolia and the regions that contained traces of Seljuk civilizations simultaneously.She was very impressed by the historical architectural structures and decoration culture he encountered.


In 2014, she decided to brand her designs within ZOYA Istanbul. In her first collection, the wise ancestors of the Turks used the richness of forms in the structures and decoration of the Seljuks as a source of inspiration and called his collection the Geometry of the Universe. She reconciled and reinterpreted the geometrical compositions she observed in the structures of the period with the concepts of flow, balance, harmony, totality, and independence she observed in life. In this first collection, Öz used minerals and enamel, from which she could repeat silver and tile colors. Thus, the designs inspired by this symbolic geometry found form in jewelry that would fit the daily rhythm of modern urban women.

Öz continues to produce sculptures and jewelry in her own studio while developing manual production techniques.
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