TANG GOLD VERMEIL FILIGREE JEWELLERY

Ancient Chinese Goldsmithing Technique,

Recognised by UNESCO,

Worn for the First Time as Quiet Luxury.

A UNESCO-recognised craft. A 2,500-year tradition. 76 steps. All in one collection.

花丝镶嵌 · 金工银作 · 非遗传承

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Tang Heritage

Gold Vermeil Peony Peace Bracelet

Gold Vermeil Peony Peace Bracelet

Regular price $521.10 USD
Regular price Sale price $521.10 USD
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玉润生香,花开富贵

Where rose quartz meets gold peony, every wrist becomes a garden.

The Gold Vermeil Peony Peace Bracelet is a piece built from the two most beloved symbols in classical Chinese ornamental tradition: the 平安扣, the flat disc form that has carried wishes for peace and protection across thousands of years; and the peony, China's most celebrated flower, the ancient emblem of prosperity, beauty, and a life in full bloom. Here, translucent rose quartz discs alternate with sculpted three-dimensional peony blooms in gold vermeil, each floret worked by hand in the intangible cultural heritage filigree tradition and accented with cubic zirconia and coloured stone inlays. It is a bracelet of considerable delicacy and considerable meaning, worn on the wrist with the ease of something that has always belonged there.

Cultural Motif & Significance

The 平安扣 (píng ān kòu) takes its form from the ancient jade disc, one of the most sacred objects in early Chinese ritual culture. Flattened and circular, with a small central opening, it has been worn for millennia as a talisman of peace, safe passage, and protection from harm. To give a 平安扣 is to give a wish: may you move through the world without difficulty, and return home safely. Rose quartz, the stone of this bracelet's discs, deepens that meaning with its associations of gentle fortune, warmth, and the kind of happiness that settles quietly rather than arriving loudly.

The peony that appears between each disc is China's national flower and the sovereign emblem of prosperity. In classical poetry and imperial decorative arts alike, it represents a life at its fullest: flourishing, generous, and without want. Together, peace and prosperity. The two things most wished for, on a single wrist.

Material

  • Solid S925 sterling silver foundation
  • Premium thick gold vermeil exterior, exceeding standard plating depth for deeper colour and extended wear
  • Silver sourced from premium-grade ore at 92.5% purity and above
  • Natural rose quartz disc beads (平安扣 form), selected for clarity and translucency
  • Cubic zirconia and coloured stone accents, hand-set into each peony floret
  • Certified free from lead, cadmium, nickel, chromium, and all harmful metals

76-Step Craftsmanship

Every bracelet is completed across 76 exacting steps of ancient goldsmithing tradition: the silver drawn into wire, twisted, pressed, stacked, wound, soldered, and set, with each stage individually inspected before the next may begin. Each three-dimensional peony floret is sculpted and worked entirely by hand in the filigree tradition, its petals formed with the same patience and precision applied to every piece in the Tang Gold Vermeil Jewellery collection. This is the craft of intangible cultural heritage silversmithing, carried forward by a lineage of master artisans for whom patience and precision are not virtues but necessities. It is craft preserved not as performance, but as standard.

Product Details

  • Material: Solid S925 sterling silver with premium thick gold vermeil, rose quartz, and cubic zirconia
  • Net weight: Approximately 18g, hand-measured
  • Length: 180mm with a 30mm extension chain for adjustable fit
  • Fit: Suitable for most wrist sizes; extension chain allows personalised adjustment
  • All measurements are hand-taken and may carry minor tolerances.

For the woman who understands that the most beautiful things carry the deepest wishes. For the gift of peace, the gift of prosperity, the gift of a piece made entirely by hand and intended to last a lifetime. The Gold Vermeil Peony Peace Bracelet is presented in Tang Heritage's signature gift box, as fitting for a wedding as for a birthday, and as meaningful as the occasion it marks.

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THE CRAFT

A UNESCO-Recognised Craft

There is a category of making so rare, so demanding, and so irreplaceable that governments step in to protect it from disappearing. Chinese filigree silversmithing is one of them.

The technique, known in Chinese as 花丝 (huā sī), literally "flower threads", involves drawing silver into wire finer than a human hair, then twisting, stacking, pressing, and soldering it into three-dimensional form, wire by wire, step by step, without machinery and without shortcuts. It has been practised in China for over 2,500 years. It is now formally recognised by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage: a living tradition so fragile that active intervention is required to preserve it.

The Tang Gold Vermeil Jewellery Collection is built on this technique. Every piece is the work of a lineage of intangible cultural heritage master artisans. Every piece takes 76 steps to complete. This is what that looks like, worn.

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WHY IT MATTERS

When UNESCO steps in to protect a craft, you know what you are holding is irreplaceable.

UNESCO does not act unless something is genuinely at risk. The designation of Chinese filigree silversmithing as intangible cultural heritage is not a celebration. It is a recognition that the number of people who truly can do this, at the level of a master artisan, is dwindling.

The knowledge required to draw silver wire to the correct tension, to press and stack it into patterns that hold their three-dimensional form under a lifetime of wear, is not something that can be acquired from a manual or learned in a weekend. It passes from master to student across decades. It lives in the hands before it lives anywhere else.

76

Steps of Ancient Goldsmithing Tradition

2,500 years of ancient Chinese goldsmithing. A 76-step process. The silver drawn into wire, twisted, pressed, stacked, wound, soldered, and set: each stage individually inspected before the next may begin. The 76 steps are the inherited choreography of a 2,500-year-old tradition.

Mass production ends at step one.
Tang Heritage begins at step 76.

2,050

Years of Ancient Chinese Goldsmithing

1

Steps to Complete Each Piece

S

249

Silver Purity Standard

1

UNESCO ICH Elements Held by China