House of Luxoria
There is a house in the Netherlands that has spent years studying the most beautiful objects ever made. Rings from the Georgian court. Pendants that survived two world wars in the lining of a coat. Diamonds cut by hand in candlelight, for a woman whose name no one remembers but whose taste endures.
From that study comes a certainty: the things that last are not the things that tried to be current. They are the things that knew, from the moment of their making, exactly what they were.
House of Luxoria begins here.
If you have seen everything that jewelry has been, you understand what it should be now.
Wear it close to the heart.
Not an initial. A monogram.
The word comes from the Greek monos and gramma which means single mark. For centuries it was the mark of royalty, engraved on silver, pressed into wax, embroidered into the corners of things that mattered.
The Monogram Collection by Luxoria Vita brings that tradition into solid 14-karat gold. Twenty-six pendants.
From the founder
There's a moment, somewhere in those first weeks, where you realise you'd do anything to hold onto this. Not the newborn phase, that passes. Just him. Who he is. Who he's going to be.
His name was the first thing I gave him. Before I knew his face, his cry, his laugh.
A single letter. And somehow it's everything.
That's The Monogram.
— Aricia
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