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organ・#5 Earrings

bubun
$6,800 TWD

The organ・#5 Earrings from Bubun.

  • The smallest design in the series, perfect alone or layered.
  • Hand-carved glass beads with pure, delicate transparency.
  • Light reflections create organic and poetic nuances.
  • Lightweight and comfortable for daily wear.

*Sold as a pair.

Description

The organ・#5 Earrings from Japanese brand Bubun are part of the “organ” series, inspired by organic bodily structures. Crafted from multiple hand-carved glass beads, the design evokes the purity and delicacy of transparent textures.

As the smallest design in the series, #5 can be worn on its own for a subtle statement or layered asymmetrically with other earrings. The glass catches the light beautifully, adding a poetic and refined touch to everyday looks.

Size | F

Glass approx. 10×18×5mm

Post length approx. 16mm, protrusion from glass approx. 10mm

Weight approx. 1g (per piece)

*Sold as a pair.

Material | Glass, K18 Gold, Thread

— Made in Japan —

Bubun

A jewellery making duo of Megumi Jin and Nobuyuki Jin, based in Japan. Fascinated by glass as a student, Megumi studied glass coldwork and kilnwork at Tama Art University, where she created objects and jewellery. While continuing to make jewellery privately after graduation, she met Nobuyuki, who has a background in design, and the two began working together, sharing a mutual sense of beauty.

The two started exhibiting their work under the name Bubun in 2016. Bubun means “part” in Japanese. They believe jewellery becomes part of a person, both in the physical sense and in the spiritual sense. In 2019, they moved from Kanagawa to Kofu, the center of the jewelry industry in Japan, where they continues to work today.

bubun

A jewellery making duo of Megumi Jin and Nobuyuki Jin, based in Japan. Fascinated by glass as a student, Megumi studied glass coldwork and kilnwork at Tama Art University, where she created objects and jewellery. While continuing to make jewellery privately after graduation, she met Nobuyuki, who has a background in design, and the two began working together, sharing a mutual sense of beauty.

The two started exhibiting their work under the name Bubun in 2016. Bubun means “part” in Japanese. They believe jewellery becomes part of a person, both in the physical sense and in the spiritual sense. In 2019, they moved from Kanagawa to Kofu, the center of the jewelry industry in Japan, where they continues to work today.

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