These two fingerrings have squared bands, symmetrically divided in half into silver and brass parts.
Claudia Christl studied goldsmithing, silversmithing, and then industrial design at the Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design in Halle/Saale. In 1996 she set up her own studio, and for the following six years worked as chief designer at Wilkens Silver Manufacture. These successive studies and work experiences allowed her to create both jewellery and everyday objects with minimalist forms, elegant and simple at the same time. Today, Claudia is particularly interested in daily tableware culture, which adorns and enhances our everyday life. Claudia's bowls, cups, salt bowls, and cutlery are handmade. Her signature aesthetic is restrained, classical, functional, and unpretentious, yet impossible to miss. She believes "the objects we see and use every day can be extraordinary."
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©ClaudiaChristl
These two fingerrings have squared bands, symmetrically divided in half into silver and brass parts.
Photo: ©ClaudiaChristl
These are two salt bowls. One of them has a gold-plated pit and the other a silver pit for salt.
Photo: ©ClaudiaChristl
This is a minimalist set of children's cutlery in subtle silver and steel.
Photo: ©ClaudiaChristl
This is a large brass serving dish, coated in tin, and a serving spoon made of sterling silver.
Photo: ©ClaudiaChristl
This is a small flat cylindrical bowl with a bright orange indentation. It is designed for salt. The serving spoon is made of fine gold.