Feather Earrings

Sale price$48.00 USD
In stock

There is a moment, just before a peacock turns, when the light hits its feathers at an angle that makes the color seem impossible — not quite teal, not quite blue, not quite violet, but all of them at once and none of them exactly. Scientists have a name for it: structural color. The feather contains no blue pigment at all. The color is an argument between light and geometry, and it changes every time you move.

That quality — iridescence as a physical phenomenon, color as something that lives and shifts rather than sits still — is one of the oldest sources of wonder in the natural world. It appears in beetle wings, in soap bubbles, in mother-of-pearl. It captivated Art Nouveau designers at the turn of the twentieth century, who borrowed it relentlessly from nature. It still stops people cold.

These earrings are built from three precisely cut layers of giclée-printed stainless steel, each suspended independently so the piece moves with a subtle, alive quality you don't expect from metal. The blues shift into greens at the top and dissolve into violet at the base — the full spectrum of a peacock's train, compressed into a 2¼-inch drop. At 3 grams per earring, they have genuine presence without weight, and the sterling silver ear wires are hypoallergenic and nickel-free.

Made in the USA by DC Designs by Illustrated Light.

  • Material: Metal
  • Metal: Stainless Steel, Sterling Silver
  • Length: 2 1/4 inches, including the ear wire
  • Weight: 3 g
  • Made in Fort Collins, Colorado