




Antinoo’s profile emerges from the bezel with a beauty that stops the eye. On the golden surface of this ring every feature is engraved with precision — the broad forehead, the line of the nose, the barely suggested mouth — and the 18 kt gold-plated bronze gathers light and returns it to the relief with a steady warmth. It is a face that speaks of balance: between the youth of the features and the depth of the gaze, between the softness of the forms and the firmness of the pose. The gold wraps this dialogue and makes it luminous, as though the metal itself recognised in the profile its own temperature.
On the hand, the ring has just the right weight — it is felt, it accompanies, it stays. The smooth base and oval bezel work together to bring Antinoo to the fore, and with every movement light draws fresh shadows across the engraving. The relief captures details that let us perceive beyond what we see: the curve of the cheek, the fold of the lips, the passage from hair to forehead. The closer one looks, the more the face reveals. It is a portrait that changes with whoever looks at it and with the light that meets it.
The colours open the story in different directions. Black draws the attention inward, deepens the relief and renders every feature more defined and present. Pearl illuminates the contours with a natural, vibrant light, awakening the softness of the features with a lustre that dances upon the gold. Porphyry instils a solemn mineral energy, where warm tones merge with intensity. Green evokes ancient marble and its sculptural fluidity, lending the jewel an unexpected vitality — a note of refinement that surprises and stays.
Wichtige Hinweise
The jewels' colors in the photo may look different from the original one. This depends from the resolution. Each object is handmade and has unique characteristics.Love remembered is never lost.
Antinous (also Antinoo or Antinoös; 27 November, c. 111 – before 30 October 130) was a Bithynian Greek youth and a favourite, or lover, of the Roman emperor Hadrian. He was deified after his death, being worshiped in both the Greek East and Latin West, sometimes as a god (theos) and sometimes merely as a deified mortal (heros). Antinous became associated with homosexuality in Western culture, appearing in the work of Oscar Wilde and the Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa.
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