{"title":"Argentium Jewelry","description":"\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\"\u003eFor seven centuries, sterling silver has come with a bargain: 92.5% silver, 7.5% copper, and a lifetime of polishing. The copper is what makes sterling hard enough to wear. It's also what tarnishes — and what troubles reactive skin.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\"\u003eIn 1996, a metallurgist named Peter Johns reworked the recipe, swapping germanium in for most of the copper. The result is Argentium: still .925 silver, but whiter, tarnish-resistant, and without the trace metals behind most \"silver allergies.\" It costs more to work with, which is why you won't see it often. The makers who use it choose to.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\"\u003eTwo of ours do. Momo Glassworks wires every dangle earring in Argentium; Bijou by SAM builds entire pieces from it. Everything here carries it — look for the flying angel, Argentium's hallmark.\u003c\/p\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"lilahaus-earrings","title":"Lilahaus Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a particular kind of house that exists mostly in memory — the one with the lilac hedge along the fence line, the one you walked past every May when the whole street smelled like spring had a color. You didn't stop to look closely. You didn't need to. The impression was enough: violet dissolving into lavender dissolving into white, all of it humming against the green.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks operates out of a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, where the married couple who created it fuse glass by hand — layering color and texture in a kiln the way a watercolorist layers washes, building something luminous from something molten. Each piece is its own small act of chemistry: pigments reacting to heat, edges softening, surfaces catching light in ways that can't be fully predicted or replicated. The result is glass that feels less like a manufactured material and more like something geological — something found.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese earrings carry that quality. A soft, almost impressionistic wash of lilac and violet sits suspended in each small glass tile, framed cleanly in sterling silver ear wires that let the color do all the talking. At just 1⅛ inches from the top of the ear wire to the base and a mere 3 grams per pair, they're extraordinarily light — the kind of earring you put on in the morning and forget about until someone asks where you got them. The ear wires are hypoallergenic and nickel-free.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThere's something quietly radical about glass this delicate worn this casually. It collapses the distance between art object and everyday adornment, which is exactly where Momo Glassworks likes to live.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks in Northampton, Massachusetts.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43547363606575,"sku":"034-E-10004","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/4DE4C773-5B19-42F6-8E04-B2752993A04D.jpg?v=1738461074"},{"product_id":"stream-flowers-triangle-earrings","title":"Stream Flowers Triangle Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eStand at the edge of a creek in late June and look down. Not at the water — at what the water carries. Petals torn loose by a passing storm, stems still bright green, color swirling against stone. There is something about flowers in motion that makes them more alive than flowers standing still, as if the current reveals what the garden keeps quiet.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a studio driven by the creativity of a married couple in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a medium that demands patience and a certain trust in the kiln. Layers of glass are stacked, heated until they merge, and allowed to cool into something that holds light the way water holds light: from within, shifting as you move. The floral forms inside these triangles have that quality of interrupted stillness, as though the blooms were caught mid-drift and sealed there, bright against the current.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe triangle silhouette sharpens everything. It gives the organic forms somewhere to go.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEach earring is fused glass set on sterling silver ear wires, hanging 1⅞ inches from the top of the wire. At 4 grams per earring, they carry a satisfying, grounded weight — present enough to feel intentional, light enough to forget about by midday. The ear wires are hypoallergenic, and the sterling silver warms gently against the skin.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43547363704879,"sku":"034-E-10006","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/C1C7C006-F301-4E92-8A8D-9C67B392A62B.jpg?v=1738463749"},{"product_id":"wild-roses-earrings","title":"Wild Roses Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003ePick a rose from a hedgerow in June and hold it up to the light. Not a cultivated hybrid — a wild one, the kind that grows tangled along stone walls and fence lines, petals so thin they're almost translucent, colors that shift between blush and cream depending on the hour. There's nothing composed about a wild rose. It just happens, and it's perfect.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio based in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a process that involves layering colored glass and firing it at high temperatures until the layers melt into one another. The result is something no printer or mold can replicate: color that lives inside the material rather than sitting on top of it, with the kind of soft, luminous depth you get in old cathedral windows or sea glass worn smooth by decades of tide. Each pair carries subtle variations because that's what happens when you let heat and glass have a conversation.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese are small and quiet in the way that wildflowers are quiet — easy to miss from across a room, impossible to stop looking at up close. The fused glass drops are set on sterling silver ear wires, hypoallergenic and gentle enough for sensitive ears. At 1⅛ inches from the top of the ear wire to the tip, and just 3 grams per earring, they sit close and light — the kind of piece you put on in the morning and forget about until someone leans in and asks where you found them.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEvery pair is shaped and fired by hand, which means no two are identical. That's not a flaw. That's the whole point.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks in Northampton, Massachusetts.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43547363934255,"sku":"034-E-10008","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/2F6DEA13-61AE-4697-8C21-05B2B0B77FEC.jpg?v=1738466269"},{"product_id":"kunsthaus-lg-triangles","title":"Künsthaus Triangle Earrings","description":"\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003e\"The straight line is godless and immoral.\"\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eThat was Friedensreich Hundertwasser's working principle, and he meant it. The Austrian artist-architect spent his career arguing that modern architecture had betrayed something essential — that buildings made of identical rectangles, with identical windows lined up in identical rows, were a kind of violence done to the people inside them.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eIn 1991, Vienna let him prove his point. Hundertwasser designed KunstHausWien — a museum dedicated to his own work — without a single straight line. Undulating floors. Windows of every shape, placed where they wanted to be. Black framing around bright red roofs and yellow walls and blue sky-colored panels, like a child's drawing rendered in concrete and ceramic. Trees growing on the rooftops. The building looks like it remembered how to be alive.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eThese earrings carry that energy in miniature. Hand-painted on fused glass — every brushstroke individual, no two pairs identical — they hold the colors and the gentle geometric irregularity of Hundertwasser's Vienna in a small triangle that catches light like stained glass.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eApproximately 15mm × 34mm (0.6\" × 1.35\"), finished with premium Argentium silver ear wires (a step up from sterling — 100% nickel-free, hypoallergenic by design). Hand-painted; production variations are inevitable and part of the work.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks (Edo Mor and Rosario Torres) in Western Massachusetts.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43547364130863,"sku":"034-E-10003","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/11637995-ED1E-4308-A402-F472CED7D169.jpg?v=1738630811"},{"product_id":"silver-flower-earrings","title":"Silver Flower Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003ePick a wildflower and hold it up to the light. Not in a meadow — somewhere quieter. A kitchen windowsill in late morning. A reading chair near a west-facing window. Watch how the petals go translucent at their thinnest edges, how the color isn't one color at all but a conversation between pigment and light, shifting every time you breathe.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThat conversation is what glass does better than almost any other material on earth. It doesn't reflect light so much as negotiate with it — absorbing some wavelengths, releasing others, transforming the rest into something you couldn't quite predict. Momo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, has built an entire practice around that principle. Each piece begins as raw glass, carefully cut and layered, then fused in a kiln where heat and chemistry collaborate to produce colors and textures that no mold or machine could replicate. The result is something that feels genuinely botanical — not because it imitates a flower, but because it captures the way a flower behaves in light.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese earrings are fused glass set in sterling silver, with a silvery luminosity that reads as cool and clean against the skin. At 1⅝ inches including the ear wires and just 2 grams per earring, they're remarkably light — the kind of piece you put on in the morning and forget about until someone across the table asks where you found them. The ear wires are hypoallergenic and nickel-free.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEvery pair is handmade, which means slight variations in color and form are not flaws — they're proof that fire had a hand in the making.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43547364196399,"sku":"034-E-10005","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/07F87AE4-4366-40A8-B943-C8CA6FF9DFB3.jpg?v=1738632112"},{"product_id":"zarape-earrings","title":"Zarape Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eWalk through any market town in Mexico and you'll see them — the blankets draped over railings and hung from doorways, their stripes so vivid they seem to hum. Zarape cloth has been woven in Mexico since at least the colonial period, its bold horizontal bands drawing from both indigenous Mesoamerican tradition and Spanish textile influence. The best ones feel less like fabric and more like declarations — color as identity, color as warmth, color as something you wrap around your shoulders and carry with you.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEach stripe in a zarape tells you where it was made, who made it, what region's dye plants and aesthetic sensibilities shaped it. The weaving tradition of Saltillo became so renowned that \"Saltillo sarape\" is practically its own art form, collected by museums from the Smithsonian to the Textile Museum in Washington. What makes the form endure is its refusal to be quiet — it insists on saturation, on contrast, on the idea that more color is not excess but generosity.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese earrings carry that same insistence.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted in fused glass by Momo Glassworks in Northampton, Massachusetts, each pair captures the zarape's layered stripes in kiln-fired color — bands of pigment sealed inside glass, luminous and warm against the skin. Sterling silver ear wires keep everything clean and hypoallergenic. At 1⅜ inches including the ear wire and just 3 grams per earring, they have the easy, confident weight of something made to be worn all day without a second thought.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43666601476143,"sku":"034-E-10010","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/B73B888D-3A25-41C4-B1A3-189EBE002980.jpg?v=1742436798"},{"product_id":"seine-bar-earrings-large","title":"Seine Bar Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a light that happens along the Seine in the late afternoon — not golden, not gray, but something in between. The kind of light that turns stone bridges into silk and makes the river look like it's holding the whole city in a single, trembling reflection. Painters have been chasing it for centuries. Monet practically gave his life to it.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWhat makes that light so impossible to capture is that it isn't one color. It's the way colors move through glass — through water, through air thick with weather and time. The Impressionists understood this. They stopped trying to paint objects and started painting the light between objects, the shimmer at the edge of things. A brushstroke of lavender next to a brushstroke of pale green, and suddenly you're standing on the Pont Neuf at four in the afternoon, watching the water do something you'll never be able to describe.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a studio owned by a married couple in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in that same in-between space — shaping glass by hand into slender, luminous bars that carry light the way the river carries sky. Each piece is its own small study in transparency and color, the kind of object that changes depending on the hour and the angle, the way all the best things do.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese earrings are handcrafted from glass and hung on sterling silver ear wires that are fully hypoallergenic. At 2⅛ inches from the top of the ear wire, they have a clean, elegant length — the kind of presence that draws the eye without raising its voice. At just 3 grams per pair, they're remarkably light, easy to wear from morning well past dusk.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43803240267823,"sku":"034-E-10012","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/2149B1AE-440E-4407-A413-D6DFCE7B3825.jpg?v=1748722168"},{"product_id":"dream-tree-drops","title":"Dream Tree Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eIn the space between waking and sleep — sometimes you see visions when you close your eyes in a sunlit room and the afterimage blooms behind your lids. The tree you see there, its branches don't follow gravity. Its colors don't follow seasons. It grows the way memory grows: sideways, luminous, untethered from anything literal.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — where glass is cut, shaped, painted, and layered, sometimes with metal elements, then heated in a kiln to over one thousand degrees to create luminous (and surprisingly tough) jewels. Every piece that comes out of the kiln carries the specific, unrepeatable conditions of the moment it was made: the temperature, the timing, the steadiness of the maker's hand. No two are identical. They can't be.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eA tree made of glass. Fragile and luminous and entirely its own.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eEach earring is a small work of art suspended from a sterling silver ear wire, hypoallergenic and kind to sensitive skin. At 1⅛ inches from the top of the ear wire to the bottom of the glass, they're intimate in scale — close to the face, catching light in quiet, surprising ways. At 3 grams per pair, they're genuinely weightless. The kind of earring you put on in the morning and forget about until someone asks you where you found them.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43803240300591,"sku":"034-E-10011","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-4327.jpg?v=1748724221"},{"product_id":"stream-flowers-rectangle-earrings","title":"Stream Flowers Rectangle Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a particular kind of seeing that happens at the edge of moving water — a softening of focus where color loosens from form and flowers along the bank stop being individual things and start becoming a single, continuous drift. Petals blur into reflections. Reflections blur into light. The whole scene becomes less about what's there and more about what it feels like to stand still long enough to notice.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, working from a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, builds that kind of quiet perception into glass. Each piece begins as glass shaped and layered by hand, a process that gives every pair of earrings subtle, unrepeatable variations in color and depth — the way no two stretches of the same stream ever look quite the same. The floral forms suspended in these small rectangles aren't painted on or printed. They live inside the glass itself, caught mid-bloom like something glimpsed through shallow water on a warm afternoon.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eStillness you can wear.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe glass rectangles are set on sterling silver ear wires that catch just enough light to stay interesting without competing with the glass. At 1⅛ inches including the ear wire and only 3 grams each, they sit close and light — the kind of earring you reach up and touch because you forgot you put them on. Hypoallergenic and nickel-free, so nothing interrupts the wearing. Each pair arrives ready to gift or to keep.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43839209046063,"sku":"034-E-10014","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/74D965DB-82B2-428A-9EB7-9B1FF59BF73C.jpg?v=1750370380"},{"product_id":"blue-moon-triangle-earrings","title":"Blue Moon Triangle Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a particular blue that only exists at the edge of things. The last five minutes before full dark, when the moon is already up but the sky hasn't surrendered yet. It's not quite cobalt, not quite indigo — it's the color of distance itself, the color your eyes reach for but never quite hold. Photographers call it the blue hour. Everyone else just stops and looks up.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eGlass has always had a unique relationship with that kind of light. The medieval glaziers knew it — they understood that glass doesn't just reflect color, it becomes it, holding light inside its body the way water holds warmth long after the sun goes down. Momo Glassworks, a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in that same tradition, shaping molten glass by hand into forms that carry color as something alive, something interior. Each triangle is a small study in geometry and luminosity — clean lines containing something fluid and deep, the precision of the shape in quiet tension with the organic nature of the material.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSterling silver ear wires let the glass do all the talking. These earrings hang 1⅞ inches from the top of the ear wire, with each pair weighing in at 4 grams — light enough to forget you're wearing them, present enough that the glass catches and holds every shift in the room's light. The ear wires are hypoallergenic sterling silver, kind to sensitive ears and cool-toned enough to disappear against the deep blue glass. Each pair is handcrafted, which means the color will carry the subtle, unrepeatable variations that only come from a human hand working with a living material.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43839209078831,"sku":"034-E-10013","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/916797D2-89A9-4CF7-8A6C-9AB56D3E198A.jpg?v=1750373179"},{"product_id":"mesa-marina-hoops","title":"Mesa \u0026 Marina Hoops","description":"\u003cp\u003eDrive far enough into the American Southwest and the palette simplifies itself. Dust and sky. Sandstone and shadow. The earth bleaches to a warm, sun-baked tan, and above it — relentless, almost unreasonably vivid — the sky goes cobalt. Not blue. Cobalt. The kind of saturated, mineral-deep color that Spanish Colonial painters ground from smalt and layered onto altarpiece panels, knowing it would still be glowing centuries later.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThat dialogue between land and sky is older than any building, any road, any name on a map. It shows up in Pueblo pottery, in Navajo weavings, in the tiled fountains of the California missions where the desert meets the coast — the mesa meeting the marina. Two worlds, two temperatures, two kinds of beauty held in tension. It is one of the most enduring color stories in American craft, and it has never once felt dated.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese hoops translate that conversation into something you can wear every day. Bijou by SAM — a woman-owned studio working out of Montana — hand-builds each pair using precision-cut Japanese Miyuki seed beads in cobalt blue and warm tan, wrapped around Argentium Sterling Silver hoops. Argentium is a purer, more tarnish-resistant grade of sterling, which means these will keep their gleam without fuss. At 1¼ inches in diameter and just 2 grams per earring, they sit lightly on the ear — the kind of hoop you forget you're wearing until someone asks about them. Hypoallergenic and nickel-free.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe result is a small, perfectly resolved object that feels as considered as a mosaic tile.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Bijou by SAM.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Bijou by SAM","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43897676955695,"sku":"014-E-10017","price":42.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-4662.jpg?v=1754187031"},{"product_id":"golden-phase-fan-earrings","title":"Golden Phase Fan Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a moment in glassblowing — right before the gather cools — when molten glass holds every color it will ever be, all at once. Gold pools inside amber inside honey inside light. It's the moment where material becomes something luminous, where craft disappears into the object it's making. You can't photograph it. But you can sometimes catch its echo in the finished piece.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe fan shape has its own deep history. It appears in Art Deco metalwork, in Japanese ceremonial design, in the radiating geometries of Byzantine mosaics. It's one of those forms that keeps surfacing across cultures because it does something elemental — it takes energy and spreads it outward, turning a single point into a whole field of movement. In glass, that radiance becomes literal. Light enters and doesn't just reflect; it diffuses, warming through the material the way afternoon sun moves through a glass of whiskey.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEach earring is handcrafted in glass by Momo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio based in Northampton, Massachusetts — a town with a long, quiet tradition of artists doing serious work in small spaces. The golden glass fans are set on sterling silver ear wires that are fully hypoallergenic, and at just 4 grams per pair, the weight is almost negligible. They hang 1¼ inches from the top of the ear wire, which puts them right at that sweet spot where they catch light and movement without ever pulling focus from the person wearing them.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44152942559279,"sku":"034-E-10016","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-4751.jpg?v=1756432696"},{"product_id":"poppy-dance-fan-earrings","title":"Poppy Dance Fan Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003ePicture a field somewhere between Provence and a dream — poppies tilting in every direction, petals curling open like small red hands catching the wind. There is no symmetry to it, no grid. Just movement, color, and the particular joy of something alive doing exactly what it wants to do.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eFan-shaped jewelry has a long, cross-cultural lineage — from Edo-period Japanese ornamental combs to the Art Nouveau plique-à-jour brooches of René Lalique, who used the fan form specifically because it could hold light and color the way a window does. It is a shape that radiates outward, that suggests opening, that turns a flat surface into something that feels like it's breathing. Momo Glassworks, a glass studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a medium where layers of glass are kiln-fired together to create depth and movement that no printed or painted surface can replicate. Each piece carries the slight variations of a handmade process: the way the red bleeds into orange, the way the surface catches and scatters light differently depending on the angle.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese are poppies that never stop dancing.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe fan silhouette is fused glass set on sterling silver ear wires, hypoallergenic and comfortable for sensitive ears. At 2 inches long including the ear wire and just 3 grams per earring, they have the vivid presence of stained glass with almost none of the weight — the kind of earring you put on in the morning and forget about until someone across the table asks where you found them.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44152942592047,"sku":"034-E-10017","price":58.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/24FDF18B-81FE-4822-BE7A-CB1D5C14B6F7.jpg?v=1756435845"},{"product_id":"golden-bloom-earrings","title":"Golden Bloom Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eLate August, when the garden has gone a little wild and the last of the black-eyed Susans are leaning toward the fence — that's the color. Not bright yellow, not gold exactly, but something in between. The color of warmth that knows it's fleeting. The color of sunlight caught in honey, held up to the window, just before you set it down.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, an art studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a process that involves layering sheets and fragments of glass, then firing them in a kiln until they meld into a single, luminous form. It's an ancient technique, older than glassblowing, and in skilled hands it produces something no other medium can: color that appears to have depth, as though you could reach into it. Each piece emerges from the kiln slightly different, shaped by the particular way heat moves through glass on a given day. That's not a flaw. That's the signature.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese earrings carry that warmth close to the face, where it does the most good.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSet on sterling silver ear wires that are fully hypoallergenic, each piece of hand-fused glass catches and holds light with a richness that feels almost edible. They hang 1¾ inches from the top of the ear wire and weigh 5 grams per earring — enough to feel substantial, enough to swing gently when you turn your head, but never heavy. The kind of weight that reminds you they're there without ever asking you to think about them.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44428589137967,"sku":"034-E-10018","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-4811.jpg?v=1757185604"},{"product_id":"lilahaus-triangle-earrings","title":"Lilahaus Triangle Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThere's a reason the triangle has held human attention for millennia. It's the simplest shape that encloses space. The first stable structure. The Egyptians built with it, Buckminster Fuller obsessed over it, and the Bauhaus distilled it into a grammar of pure form — a visual language where geometry wasn't decoration but meaning itself. A triangle says: I am reduced to what matters.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks operates out of a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, where the married founders and glass artists build each piece by hand using a kiln-fusing process that bonds layers of glass at temperatures exceeding 1400 degrees. The result isn't painted or coated — the color lives inside the material, locked in by heat, with a surface that carries the subtle depth and luminosity that only fused glass can achieve. The Lilahaus Triangle takes that ancient, irreducible geometry and renders it in a medium that catches and holds light the way stone or metal never could.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSterling silver ear wires finish each pair with clean, quiet hardware that lets the glass do the talking.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eAt 1¾ inches from the top of the ear wire to the base of the triangle, these have a presence that reads across a room without competing with anything else you're wearing. They weigh just 4 grams per pair — genuinely weightless for something with this much visual substance. The ear wires are hypoallergenic, so they're suited for sensitive ears and long, unhurried days alike.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks in Northampton, Massachusetts.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44442723975215,"sku":"034-E-10019","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-4851.jpg?v=1757270654"},{"product_id":"purple-strata-bar-earrings","title":"Purple Strata Bar Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eCut into a hillside, the earth tells its own story in layers. Sandstone gives way to shale, shale to limestone, each stratum a different age, a different mineral, a different shade of violet and grey laid down over millennia. Geologists read these bands the way musicians read a score — horizontally, patiently, one line at a time.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a process that involves layering sheets and powders of glass and firing them in a kiln until they bond into a single, solid form. The result here is a slender bar striped with purples that range from deep amethyst to pale lavender, each band distinct yet inseparable from the next. The colors don't sit on the surface. They live inside the glass itself, built up through heat and pressure in a way that genuinely mirrors the geology they evoke.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese are set on sterling silver ear wires, hypoallergenic and comfortable enough to forget you're wearing them — until the light catches the glass and someone across the table asks where you found them. At 2 inches from the top of the ear wire and just 3 grams per earring, they carry real visual weight with almost none of the physical kind.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44652891144239,"sku":"034-E-10020","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5082.jpg?v=1763336570"},{"product_id":"sephirot-earrings","title":"Sephirot Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eBefore there was a world, there was a diagram. In the Kabbalistic tradition, the Tree of Life — the Sephirot — maps the ten emanations through which the infinite becomes the finite, the unknowable becomes the felt. Each sphere is a quality: wisdom, beauty, foundation, crown. Each pathway between them is a relationship. It is not a picture of God. It is a picture of how God becomes everything else.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe image has traveled far beyond its origins, winding through Renaissance alchemy, Hermetic mysticism, and the esoteric margins of Western art — every era finding in it a new mirror. What endures is the geometry itself: a structure that feels simultaneously ancient and inevitable, as though someone had drawn the blueprint for meaning. The circles balance. The lines hold. There is nothing extra.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, renders this symbol in fused glass — a medium where color is built through heat rather than applied to a surface. Each piece carries the depth and luminosity that only kiln-fired glass can hold, with a quality of light that shifts subtly as you move.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eSet in sterling silver with hypoallergenic ear wires, these earrings hang 1⅜ inches including the wire and weigh just 3 grams per earring — barely there physically, though the image itself has a quiet gravity that tends to draw people closer.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44840392622127,"sku":"034-E-10021","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5265.jpg?v=1768692221"},{"product_id":"glacial-study-earrings","title":"Glacial Study Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eIce remembers everything. Every shift in temperature, every cycle of thaw and refreeze, every century of slow compression — all of it written into the glass-clear strata of a glacier's face. The colors are never what you expect. Not white, not blue, but something between the two: a suspended, luminous cool that seems to hold light inside it rather than reflect it back.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThat quality — the way glacial ice appears to generate its own interior glow — has fascinated scientists and painters alike for centuries. Frederic Edwin Church spent months in the Arctic in 1859 sketching icebergs, trying to understand how frozen water could contain so much color. He called the light \"unearthly.\" The challenge was always the same: how do you capture something that is simultaneously transparent and opaque, still and shifting, ancient and ephemeral.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a medium that answers Church's question in miniature. Each earring is kiln-formed by hand, layering glass at high temperatures until the material develops the kind of depth and internal luminosity that cold alone takes millennia to produce. The result is a small, quiet study in glacial color that changes subtly as it catches the light.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eSet on sterling silver ear wires that are hypoallergenic and nickel-free, these hang just 1 inch from top of wire to tip — intimate and close, the kind of piece that rewards a second look rather than announcing itself across the room. At 3 grams per earring, they carry almost no weight at all.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44913312366639,"sku":"034-E-10022","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5489.jpg?v=1772414441"},{"product_id":"color-theory-earrings","title":"Color Theory Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eBefore the wheel, before the canvas, before language itself — there was color. Josef Albers spent the last twenty-five years of his life trying to prove that no color exists in isolation, that every hue is a performance shaped by whatever stands beside it. His students at Yale would stare at squares nested inside squares until their eyes ached, learning to see what was actually there instead of what they assumed. The lesson was always the same: color is a relationship, not a fact.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a studio owned by a married couple in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in that same space between intention and surprise. Each pair of these earrings is born from fused glass — raw fragments and powders of color layered and heated in a kiln until they meld into something that could not have been predicted from the ingredients alone. The process is part chemistry, part intuition. No two firings behave identically, which means no two pairs are truly alike. What emerges is a small, luminous field of color interaction — the kind Albers would have recognized immediately.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eProof that theory can be worn.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSet on sterling silver ear wires that are fully hypoallergenic, each earring measures just 1 inch from the top of the wire to the tip of the glass and weighs a barely-there 3 grams per earring. The scale is intimate — closer to a gem than a statement piece — but the color holds its own from any distance. This is jewelry that rewards a closer look.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44913312399407,"sku":"034-E-10023","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5496.jpg?v=1772416446"},{"product_id":"midnight-sakura-earrings","title":"Midnight Sakura Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eWalk through a Japanese garden after dark and the cherry blossoms don't disappear — they translate. Moonlight catches the edges of each petal and turns pink into something cooler, something closer to smoke. The branches become calligraphy against a sky that isn't black so much as the deepest possible blue. Everything you thought you knew about the flowers by daylight rearranges itself into something quieter, stranger, more honest.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHanami — the centuries-old Japanese tradition of gathering beneath blooming cherry trees — is usually depicted in full spring sunlight, all soft pinks and celebration. But there is another tradition, less photographed and far more atmospheric: yozakura, the viewing of sakura at night. Lanterns are strung through the branches, sake is poured, and the blossoms take on an entirely different character — luminous against the dark, almost spectral. It is the same tree, but it is not the same experience.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, captures that nocturnal shift in fused glass. Each earring is shaped and fired by hand, layering color within the glass itself so that the depth you see isn't painted on — it's built in, the way light is built into a lantern. The result is a small, luminous form that holds its own darkness and its own glow simultaneously. Set on sterling silver ear wires that are fully hypoallergenic, each earring weighs 4 grams and hangs 1⅛ inches from the top of the ear wire — compact and close to the face, with the quiet intensity of something seen by moonlight rather than by day.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44913312432175,"sku":"034-E-10024","price":58.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5501.jpg?v=1772417663"},{"product_id":"pinnate-square-earrings","title":"Pinnate Square Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003ePick up a leaf — any leaf — and hold it to the light. Watch how the veins branch outward from the central stem in mirrored pairs, each one thinner than the last, each one reaching for the edge. Botanists call this pattern pinnate, from the Latin for feather. It is one of nature's oldest engineering drawings, a blueprint for distributing water and light across the widest possible surface. It appears in ferns, in ash trees, in the fossilized impressions of plants that predate the dinosaurs.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMomo Glassworks, a woman-owned studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, works in fused glass — a medium that requires building color and pattern before the kiln does its irreversible work. There is no glazing after the fact, no painted detail. Every line and hue must be laid in beforehand, then surrendered to heat. What emerges is something that holds light differently than any other material: not reflecting it, not absorbing it, but seeming to contain it. The pinnate pattern here is rendered in this way — vein by vein, layer by layer — and then set into a clean square frame that gives all that organic movement a geometric home.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eStructure and wildness, holding each other in place.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEach earring is fused glass set in sterling silver, with sterling silver ear wires that are hypoallergenic and nickel-free. At seven-eighths of an inch including the ear wire, they sit close and compact — the kind of earring you reach up and touch because the surface catches you off guard. At just 2 grams per earring, they are extraordinarily light, designed for wearing all day without a second thought.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Momo Glassworks.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Momo Glassworks","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44913312497711,"sku":"034-E-10025","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5508.jpg?v=1772418880"},{"product_id":"canyon-dusk-earrings","title":"Canyon Dusk Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eDrive west long enough and the sun doesn't set — it melts. The horizon goes molten, layering itself in bands of amber, copper, and rose until you can't tell where the rock ends and the sky begins. Canyon country at dusk is not a single color. It's a conversation between dozens of them, all warm, all shifting, all impossible to hold still.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese earrings read like a geological cross-section of that moment. Gold sunstone carries the deep amber glow of the last direct light. Orange aventurine captures the warm midtone — that burnt-peach haze that hovers just above the ridgeline. And strawberry quartz brings the softest blush, the pink that creeps in when the sun finally slips below the edge. Stacked together, the three stones don't just suggest a sunset. They map one, mineral by mineral, from fire to fade.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eEach earring is set on silver-toned findings that stay cool and quiet, letting the stones do all the talking. At 1¼ inches from post to tip and just 1 gram per earring, they carry almost no weight — the kind of piece you put on in the morning and forget about until someone asks where you got them. Hypoallergenic and nickel-free.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted in Montana by Bijou by SAM.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Bijou by SAM","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45318105399343,"sku":"014-E-10027","price":48.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5939.jpg?v=1780191993"},{"product_id":"she-persisted-earrings","title":"She Persisted Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eThree words entered the congressional record on February 7, 2017, and refused to leave. Senator Mitch McConnell, attempting to silence Elizabeth Warren as she read Coretta Scott King's letter on the Senate floor, offered what he intended as an admonishment: \"She was warned. She was given an explanation. Nevertheless, she persisted.\" Within hours, the phrase had shed its original context entirely. It became a rallying cry, a meme, a tattoo, a declaration — not about one woman, but about every woman who had ever been told to sit down and kept standing.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eWhat makes the phrase endure is that it was never really new. It described Harriet Tubman crossing back into slave territory again and again. It described Marie Curie returning to her lab after the Academy of Sciences refused her membership. It described Dolores Huerta on the picket line, Malala Yousafzai in the classroom, every unnamed woman who simply did not stop. The words caught fire because they named something ancient — a persistence so quiet and so constant that power could not recognize it until it had already won.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese earrings carry that weight in three stones stacked like a spine. Deep red jade sits at the base, grounding the piece with warmth and resilience. Lapis lazuli — the stone medieval painters ground into ultramarine pigment, once more valuable than gold — rises in the center with its unmistakable midnight blue. White howlite crowns the top, cool and clarifying. Each bead is hand-strung onto Argentium sterling silver wire, a purer alloy that resists tarnish and is fully hypoallergenic and nickel-free. At 1¾ inches including the ear wire and just 2 grams per earring, they sit close and feel effortless — present without demanding attention, which feels exactly right.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted by Bijou by SAM, a woman-owned studio in Montana.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Bijou by SAM","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45318105497647,"sku":"014-E-10028","price":50.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5879.jpg?v=1779156307"},{"product_id":"clear-july-morning-earrings","title":"Clear July Morning Earrings","description":"\u003cp\u003eDrive north long enough on a July morning and you reach a place where the air turns thin and dry and impossibly clear. The sky doesn't look blue so much as it looks infinite — a saturated, depthless field that makes the red rock below it almost vibrate. Everything is color at its most honest. No haze, no filter, no compromise.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eSea sediment jasper holds that kind of honesty in stone. Formed from compressed sedimentary layers and stabilized with dyes that saturate through its natural grain, each bead carries bands of red, white, and blue that feel less like a palette and more like a landscape — striated, organic, unrepeatable. No two stones look alike because no two layers of earth settled the same way. The name is geological, but the experience is something closer to staring into a canyon wall at sunrise.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThese earrings pair that raw, painterly stone with Argentium sterling silver threaders — a purer, more tarnish-resistant form of sterling that slips through the ear with almost no weight at all. At just 1 gram per earring and a 1½ inch drop, they carry presence without effort, the stone doing all the talking while the silver disappears into the gesture of wearing them. The threaders are hypoallergenic and nickel-free, and the Argentium silver means they'll keep their quiet brightness far longer than traditional sterling.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eHandcrafted in Montana by Bijou by SAM, a woman-owned studio where every piece is made by hand, one at a time.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMade in the USA by Bijou by SAM.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Bijou by SAM","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45318105530415,"sku":"014-E-10025","price":50.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0604\/1065\/8863\/files\/IMG-5890.jpg?v=1779158065"}],"url":"https:\/\/haroldandhazel.com\/collections\/argentium.oembed","provider":"Harold \u0026 Hazel","version":"1.0","type":"link"}