Thereβs an old kind of luxury that fits in the palm of your hand. These cases β for snuff, tobacco or cards β are small architectures of elegance: pocket objects made for ritual, for a slower gesture, for that instant when a lid opens and time softens.
I see a whole collection of worlds in them: mother-of-pearl with moonlike reflections, narrative engravings (almost cinema in metal), monograms of belonging, and a gilded filigree that feels like lace worked to infinity, punctuated by blue and green floral enamels β as if jewellery decided to become useful without losing its poetry.
By their language and techniques, Iβd place them presumably in the late 19th / early 20th century, with pieces attributable to Central European workshops and also to the Russian/Caucasus tradition (where filigree and enamel reach a rare exuberance). These are objects with soul: they survived because they were loved β and you can feel it in the patina, the softened shine, the intimacy of use.



















