Some treasures whisper.
This one kicks the damn door off the hinges.
The first time I wrapped my hand around this cuff, I couldn’t help but grin. Tyler Brown wasn’t trying to make another nice cluster cuff—he was making a statement.
A burst of high-grade Kingman turquoise radiates from a commanding center stone, every cabochon chosen with purpose. The blues dance together without ever becoming uniform. Every stone has its own personality, but together they become something much larger than the sum of their parts.
Then comes the weight.
250 grams of sterling silver.
Not heavy for the sake of being heavy.
Heavy because nothing about this piece was meant to be compromised.
Every twisted wire bezel, every hand-placed silver raindrop, every inch of the construction reminds you that great Navajo jewelry is built—not manufactured. You don’t just see the craftsmanship… you feel it the moment it settles onto your wrist.
Kingman turquoise has been one of the defining stones of the American Southwest for generations, prized for its unmistakable blue and its deep connection to Navajo silversmithing. When material like this finds its way into the hands of an artist like Tyler Brown, the result isn’t just jewelry.
It’s something collectors spend years hoping to find.
Artifact Registry
Artifact: Blue Supernova
Maker: Tyler Brown (Navajo)
Materials
- High-Grade Natural Kingman Turquoise
- Sterling Silver
Specifications
- Weight: 250 grams
- Wrist Size: Approximately 6.75 inches
- Construction: Hand-fabricated cluster cuff with individually bezel-set stones, traditional twisted wire, sterling raindrop appliqué, and a substantial hand-forged cuff.
Field Observation
The symmetry is what catches your eye first.
The weight is what convinces you.
The craftsmanship is what keeps you staring.
Eric’s Notes from the Field
Every once in a while I pick up a piece and immediately think,
“Well… this one’s going to be hard to let go.”
This cuff is exactly that.
No gimmicks.
No shortcuts.
Just phenomenal turquoise wrapped in enough silver to remind you why handmade jewelry still matters.
If your collection is built around pieces that make people stop mid-conversation, you’ve found one.
Some relics are meant to be admired.
This one was meant to be worn.
Some treasures whisper.
This one kicks the damn door off the hinges.
The first time I wrapped my hand around this cuff, I couldn’t help but grin. Tyler Brown wasn’t trying to make another nice cluster cuff—he was making a statement.
A burst of high-grade Kingman turquoise radiates from a commanding center stone, every cabochon chosen with purpose. The blues dance together without ever becoming uniform. Every stone has its own personality, but together they become something much larger than the sum of their parts.
Then comes the weight.
250 grams of sterling silver.
Not heavy for the sake of being heavy.
Heavy because nothing about this piece was meant to be compromised.
Every twisted wire bezel, every hand-placed silver raindrop, every inch of the construction reminds you that great Navajo jewelry is built—not manufactured. You don’t just see the craftsmanship… you feel it the moment it settles onto your wrist.
Kingman turquoise has been one of the defining stones of the American Southwest for generations, prized for its unmistakable blue and its deep connection to Navajo silversmithing. When material like this finds its way into the hands of an artist like Tyler Brown, the result isn’t just jewelry.
It’s something collectors spend years hoping to find.
Artifact Registry
Artifact: Blue Supernova
Maker: Tyler Brown (Navajo)
Materials
- High-Grade Natural Kingman Turquoise
- Sterling Silver
Specifications
- Weight: 250 grams
- Wrist Size: Approximately 6.75 inches
- Construction: Hand-fabricated cluster cuff with individually bezel-set stones, traditional twisted wire, sterling raindrop appliqué, and a substantial hand-forged cuff.
Field Observation
The symmetry is what catches your eye first.
The weight is what convinces you.
The craftsmanship is what keeps you staring.
Eric’s Notes from the Field
Every once in a while I pick up a piece and immediately think,
“Well… this one’s going to be hard to let go.”
This cuff is exactly that.
No gimmicks.
No shortcuts.
Just phenomenal turquoise wrapped in enough silver to remind you why handmade jewelry still matters.
If your collection is built around pieces that make people stop mid-conversation, you’ve found one.
Some relics are meant to be admired.
This one was meant to be worn.