Design

Ophelia Eve's Scroll Pendant Hides Secret Messages in 18K Gold

Ophelia Eve's Scroll pendant hides a washi-paper message inside unscrewing 18K gold ends, making the wearer the only one who knows what's there.

Priya Sharma2 min read
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Ophelia Eve's Scroll Pendant Hides Secret Messages in 18K Gold
Source: nationaljeweler.com
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The brushed 18K yellow-gold toggle sits at the sternum, unremarkable at a glance. Unscrew one diamond-set end and a tiny washi-paper scroll emerges: a love note, a mantra, a date you wrote to yourself three years from now.

That's the conceit behind Ophelia Eve's Scroll pendant. The piece revives a Victorian preoccupation with intimacy and secrecy, wearable objects that carried coded meaning for the person who knew where to look, and recasts it in a resolutely contemporary construction.

The pendant is built from modular components that unscrew, allowing it to be configured multiple ways depending on how the wearer wants to carry it. The diamonds are set into both ends of the toggle, so even in its closed state the piece reads as finished jewelry rather than a puzzle box. The scroll inside is made from traditional Japanese washi paper, chosen for its durability and textural qualities. Washi, produced from kozo plant fibers among other sources, is far more resilient than conventional paper, which matters for something intended to be worn daily against skin and body heat.

Co-founder Samantha Yorn described the pendant as a "vessel of time," a small object designed to evolve alongside its wearer rather than stay fixed. The phrase is precise: a locket carries a photograph of what was; a scroll can hold what you intend to become.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

In 18K yellow gold with a brushed finish, the pendant has the warmth and slight softness of surface that distinguishes brushed gold from its high-polish counterpart, a texture that ages gracefully and resists the fussiness of mirror-bright fine jewelry. The diamond accents at the ends provide enough contrast to signal the material seriousness of the piece without pushing it into statement territory.

The Victorian locket never really went away; it migrated into charm bracelets, into photo pendants, into the keepsake corner of every fine jeweler's case. What Ophelia Eve has done is update the underlying logic: instead of a fixed image sealed behind glass, a message that can change. A pendant that, by design, asks to be opened.

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