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 Wanshou Blessing Ring

Gold Vermeil Wanshou Blessing Ring

Regular price $253.30 USD
Regular price Sale price $253.30 USD
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万寿福,指尖藏吉

Ten thousand longevities, ten thousand blessings: worn at the finger, carried through every day.

The Gold Vermeil Wanshou Blessing Ring is a piece built entirely from the vocabulary of Chinese auspicious art, rendered in filigree goldwork of exceptional precision. The wide band is constructed from hand-wrought filigree in S999 sterling silver with premium thick gold vermeil, its surface an open lattice of repeating floral motifs worked wire by wire across 76 artisan steps. At the face of the ring, a kiln-fired high-temperature enamel composition in teal, blue, red, and gold depicts the 万寿福 (wàn shòu fú) motif: a bat in flight amid auspicious clouds, its form rendered in the classical court palette of the imperial workshops. The bat — 蝠 (fú) — carries its blessing in its name, a perfect homophone of 福 (fortune), a visual pun that Chinese decorative art has employed for centuries with complete seriousness. Two small freshwater pearl accents flank the band, adding a quiet luminosity to the gold. This is a ring that means what it shows.

Cultural Motif & Significance

万寿福 (wàn shòu fú) is one of the most concentrated expressions of Chinese auspicious symbolism. 万寿 — ten thousand longevities — was the blessing reserved for emperors, invoked at court as the highest wish for a life without end. 福 — fortune, abundance, the fullness of a life well lived — is among the most written, painted, embroidered, and carved characters in the entire history of Chinese visual culture. Together, they form a compound blessing of extraordinary weight, given material form here through the bat motif: 蝠 and 福 share a sound, so the bat in Chinese art is never merely decorative. It is a wish made visible.

The auspicious cloud border that frames the composition echoes the xiangyun motif found across imperial lacquerware, porcelain, and embroidery: clouds as harbingers of good fortune, appearing wherever blessings are meant to follow. To wear this ring is to carry that accumulated wish at the finger, where it is seen with every gesture.

Material

  • Solid S999 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 99% purity and above, the standard of aerospace and precision engineering
  • Kiln-fired high-temperature enamel in imperial teal, blue, red, and gold, fired for permanence of colour
  • Freshwater pearl side accents, individually selected
  • Certified free from lead, cadmium, nickel, chromium, and all harmful metals

76-Step Craftsmanship

Every ring 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. This is the practice of intangible cultural heritage silversmithing, carried forward by a lineage of master artisans for whom patience and precision are not virtues but necessities. The resulting texture is crisp, architectural, and three-dimensional in a way that lies entirely beyond the reach of mechanical production. It is craft preserved not as performance, but as standard.

Product Details

  • Material: Solid S999 sterling silver with premium thick gold vermeil, kiln-fired high-temperature enamel, and freshwater pearl accents
  • Net weight: Approximately 3.6g, hand-measured
  • Dimensions: Length 31mm × width 7.8mm × thickness 6.7mm
  • Available sizes: 16#, 18#, 20# (Hong Kong sizing)
  • All measurements are hand-taken and may carry minor tolerances.

For the woman who understands that the finest rings are not worn for appearance alone. For the gift that carries a wish — for longevity, for fortune, for the full abundance of a life. For the occasion that calls for something with the depth of a classical blessing and the beauty of a craftsman's life work. The Gold Vermeil Wanshou Blessing Ring is presented in Tang Heritage's signature gift box, ready to be worn and kept.

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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