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The Mind of
TAMR HENNA.
Every collection begins as a question. What remains of a culture when the people are separated from the land? What can silver hold that thread already knows?
[PREFERRED PUBLIC NAME OR TITLE — confirm with Mariam]
TAMR HENNA is the work of a Palestinian creative director whose eye was trained on architecture before it turned to jewelry. On the logic of built things. On the way geometry can carry a civilisation in a single repeated unit.
The brand is not an accident. It is the answer to a question asked for a long time: how do you carry something that cannot be packed into a suitcase?
“I wanted to make something that could hold a memory the way a building holds light. Sterling silver seemed like the only honest answer.”
What drives the work.
Palestinian embroidery is one of the most sophisticated visual languages in the world. Stitched by women across centuries, it carries information about place, life stage, and identity with precision that no photograph can match.
The work of TAMR HENNA is to translate that precision into a different material — without losing the intelligence. Without flattening the meaning. Without making it decorative.
Each piece is designed to carry something real. To be worn by someone who knows what it holds — or to be received by someone who is about to find out.
What every TAMR HENNA piece is built on.
Source
Every piece begins in Palestinian visual heritage. A motif. A geometry. A pattern that already knew what it was saying long before we arrived.
Precision
Sterling silver 925. Finished by hand. Inspected before it leaves. The quality of the material reflects the seriousness of the source.
Meaning
A piece that cannot be explained in two words is not a failure. It is an invitation. TAMR HENNA pieces are designed to prompt a conversation.
Permanence
Made to be worn. Made to be gifted. Made to be passed on. Not a trend. A piece that belongs to the person who receives it — and eventually to who comes next.
The mind made the collection.
The hands made the silver.
Sixteen pieces. Each one the result of both.
