Light sinking into clay
These small teardrop studs keep evening light very close to the skin. Cream clay swirls with rose, gold and ochre to form soft rustic sunset drops. I let the colours travel in gentle arcs, never strictly even, always following their own path. Tiny flecks catch the light as you move, like a last reflection on warm stone. The surface is smooth and glossy, yet you can sense quiet layers underneath. Together they feel grounded and bright, a calm glow instead of a loud spark. The teardrop shape naturally guides the gaze downward, like a sigh of fading light. To me they feel like small windows into that hour when day loosens its grip.
The last light of day
Luz de Ocaso, the light of sunset, has always felt like a soft farewell to me. There is no rush in that hour, only air slowly cooling over stone and earth. These soft rustic sunset drops were shaped with that same unhurried rhythm in mind. Each swirl of pigment settles differently into the clay, carrying a trace of my hands. When the studs catch light, the warm reds and golds feel like the sky’s final colour. They belong firmly to Rustic Grace, where earthen tones, handworked texture and quiet radiance live together. Nothing about them asks for attention, yet the colours stay present, quiet and sure. They feel like a memory you can touch whenever you need a slower breath.
Wearing evening warmth all day
This pair rests close to the ear, easy to wear from first errands to late dinners. I like them with soft knits, linen shirts or a simple dress that lets the colour speak. You might choose them for market days, terrace coffees or slow walks along narrow streets. They feel right when you are closing your laptop, stepping outside and letting the day soften. However you style them, they hold a small reminder that endings can glow just as gently as beginnings. Their size keeps them practical for everyday plans, from work meetings to late trains home. I love how they sit between casual and dressed, ready to follow whatever the evening becomes.
For the Rustic Grace story, Luz de Ocaso feels like the closing note of the day. Other pieces speak of earth, stone and workshop dust; this one brings the last wash of colour. I turn to it when the collection needs a gentle flame, something small and bright that softens rougher textures without hiding them.







