Sanamama opens Miami boutique for custom spiritual fine jewelry
Sanamama's Bay Harbor Islands boutique turns custom jewelry into a ritual, pairing 14k and 18k gold pieces with crystal tools, sound bowls, and private design sessions.

At 1160 Kane Concourse in Bay Harbor Islands, Sanamama opened a boutique that reads less like a jewelry shop and more like a sanctuary for adornment. The first Miami-area location brings together 14k and 18k gold jewelry, crystal tones sound bowls, sacred home objects, and private custom-design consultations, all shaped by founder Gabi Torres’s belief that fine jewelry should be lived with, worn daily, and felt as much as seen.
Torres, who has worked with crystals for more than a decade, built Sanamama around healing arts, art therapy, yoga instruction, and spiritual practice. That background gives the boutique a distinctly different cadence from a traditional luxury counter. The brand describes itself as “one-of-a-kind spiritual fine jewelry,” and the store’s mix of tactile objects and bespoke appointments turns the act of buying jewelry into something more intimate: a ritual of selection, reflection, and intention.

The timing sharpened that point. Sanamama opened on April 16, 2026, on the eve of the New Moon, a detail that fit the brand’s emphasis on energy and renewal. Torres has said she wants clients to feel grounded, inspired, and able to connect with what is calling them, a language that places the boutique squarely within the growing appetite for personalization that carries emotional weight. In bespoke jewelry, the most compelling pieces are no longer only about carat weight or gold content. They are about identity, meaning, and the private story a wearer assigns to a setting, a stone, or a symbol.
The opening also drew a polished crowd. Grand-opening coverage named Kate Love, DeAngelo Russell, Kristin Sanchez, Samantha Rivera, and Andrea Minski among the guests, underscoring the brand’s reach beyond a narrow spiritual niche. One signature pair, the Father Sun Earth Mother Earrings, was valued at $22,000, a price point that places Sanamama firmly in the realm of serious fine jewelry even as its presentation borrows from the world of wellness and sacred objects.

That hybrid position is part of Sanamama’s appeal. The brand has already been worn by Taylor Swift, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Madelyn Cline, which helps explain why its Miami debut feels bigger than a neighborhood opening. It suggests a future for bespoke jewelry shopping in which the appointment itself becomes the luxury, and the finished piece is only the final expression of a far more personal encounter.
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