
Knife Collection
Ring and Bracelet duo exploring feminity, violence and armor.

We first eat with our hands- I made jewelry to reflect that.
Knifes for both fingers and wrists- ring and bracelet.
Ring




Bracelet




metal attachment


hidden armor inspired by insect shell folding mechanisms


Ouroborus Necklace


The Ouroboros Necklace embodies the eternal cycle of life, death, and transformation. The serpent, eating its own tail, is an ancient symbol from Norse mythology and other early religious iconography representing both destruction and renewal, or rather how each go hand in hand.In the Bible, the serpent evokes temptation and forbidden knowledge, the beginning of consciousness and guilt. Yet in other traditions, the snake’s act of shedding its skin symbolizes healing, rebirth, and regeneration. The necklace’s continuous form references this Norwegian mythology of Jörmungandr, cyclical eternity and fate.
The circular motion of the Ouroboros suggests predetermined causality. By wearing this piece, the body becomes part of this loopThis necklace thus connects craftsmanship and existential philosophy.




Metal Belt
Combining ancient Norwegian craft with modern technology, this piece reinterprets the idea of a prophecy tapestry as a wearable belt. Drawing from Norwegian folklore, Celtic weaving, and “bunad” jewelry traditions, the 12 tiles created twelve seasons each representing a stage in the passage of life, from birth to death, spring to winter.
When assembled around the waist, the twelve segments form a circle of continuity. The belt’s center of rotation lies at the stomach, the place of conception, mirroring how the sun anchors the shifting of the seasons. This alignment between cosmic and bodily cycles reflects a universal pattern: existence as rotation, a sequence of transformation and return.
By merging deterministic philosophy with folk cosmology, the work examines how life and death, ancient and modern, body and cosmos are bound within a single, recurring pattern.


