Stories Cast in Silver
Designed by a third-generation jeweler and handcrafted in Bali with a focus on ethical, sustainable practices. Each piece is made with intention, designed to carry a story and be passed down.
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Premium Materials
Every Hidden Depths piece begins with solid 925 sterling silver. We don't use stainless steel, brass, or other low-cost base metals. Silver has a weight, feel, and character that simply can't be replicated, which is why we've chosen to build our collection around it.
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Handcrafted
From wax carving and casting to polishing and stone setting, the details that give our jewelry its depth and character are created by skilled artisans rather than automated machinery.
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Ethically Sourced
We make our jewelry in small batches alongside skilled artisans in Bali rather than mass producing thousands of pieces at a time. We use recycled precious metals whenever possible and carefully source our gemstones, occasionally using lab-created stones when they offer a more ethical or sustainable alternative.
How Our Jewelry Is Made
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The Big Idea
Every piece starts with an idea pulled from mythology, philosophy, ancient history, art, or cinema.
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Hand Carved In Wax
The textures and details are sculpted into wax before the piece ever becomes metal.
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Cast In Solid Silver
The wax model is transformed into solid 925 sterling silver through lost-wax casting.
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Finished By Hand
Each piece is cleaned, polished, oxidized, and inspected before it leaves the studio.
Why We Work With Bali Artisans
Bali has a long tradition of silver craftsmanship. We work with skilled master artisans who understand the kind of imperfect, textured, relic-like jewelry we want to make.
We also chose our production partners because they share our values around responsible production, using recycled silver and gold from Responsible Jewellery Council-certified suppliers and ethically sourced, conflict-free gemstones.
As a third-generation jeweler, I wanted to work with people who grew up around the craft and carry that same sense of legacy in their hands. That shared respect for the old way of making things is a big part of why Bali felt right.