Bird of Pray Buckle, Sterling Silver, Edition of 101, First 5 Available Now

$3,750.00

Bird of Pray Buckle in 925 Sterling Silver— Limited edition of 101. Conceived, made, and hand-finished in New York. 

Choose your exact edition number (0/100–100/100). Once a number sells, it’s gone.

Finish options: Mirror Polish or Antique Patina (+$50).

Sculpted based on my oil painting “Halcyon” of a ten-winged osprey, this belt buckle imbues motion into stillness.

Halcyon comes from ancient legend: a sacred bird believed to still the sea by spreading its wings, creating a rare window of calm for sailors to pass safely. Over eons, the word also came to mean a peaceful period of time itself — a suspension, a clearing, a moment held outside of chaos. The Halcyon Buckle embodies both meanings at once. Its layered, biblically-accurate, angelic wings radiate outward like a multiple-exposure image, as if the bird’s motion has been captured across successive instants. Each wing becomes a frame in time — past, present, and future collapsing into a single form. Worn on the body, the ring is not only a symbol of protection and stillness, but a sculptural meditation on duration: calm not as stasis, but as movement slowed, revealed, and made eternal.

Number of Edition:

Bird of Pray Buckle in 925 Sterling Silver— Limited edition of 101. Conceived, made, and hand-finished in New York. 

Choose your exact edition number (0/100–100/100). Once a number sells, it’s gone.

Finish options: Mirror Polish or Antique Patina (+$50).

Sculpted based on my oil painting “Halcyon” of a ten-winged osprey, this belt buckle imbues motion into stillness.

Halcyon comes from ancient legend: a sacred bird believed to still the sea by spreading its wings, creating a rare window of calm for sailors to pass safely. Over eons, the word also came to mean a peaceful period of time itself — a suspension, a clearing, a moment held outside of chaos. The Halcyon Buckle embodies both meanings at once. Its layered, biblically-accurate, angelic wings radiate outward like a multiple-exposure image, as if the bird’s motion has been captured across successive instants. Each wing becomes a frame in time — past, present, and future collapsing into a single form. Worn on the body, the ring is not only a symbol of protection and stillness, but a sculptural meditation on duration: calm not as stasis, but as movement slowed, revealed, and made eternal.