Final Collection — 70% Off

6 Women. 50+ Years of Craft. One Last Collection.

What started at a church craft night in 1968 became a 50-year sisterhood. We've spent decades perfecting our craft, selling only to friends, family, and church communities. Now, we're finally sharing our work with the world — one last time.

50+ Years of Craft
Atlantic Sea Glass

Atlantic Sea Glass

Hand-collected from our coasts

American Quartz

American Quartz

From the Blue Ridge mountains

Appalachian Gems

Appalachian Gems

From Carolina's mountains

Sterling Silver

Sterling Silver

American-refined quality

"We only use American materials. Every stone, every pearl — sourced from our own land."

— Maggie

We Made Jewelry To Pass The Time

It was 1968. Our husbands were in Vietnam. Six of us — strangers — found each other at a church craft night. Hands busy, hearts heavy, waiting for news that might never come.

That night, we became sisters.

Six women at church craft night, 1968

Meet The Women Behind Hearts Apart

Six military wives. Five branches. One sisterhood.

Dee

Dee

71 · Marines

Maggie

Maggie

68 · Army

Ruthie

Ruthie

66 · Air Force

Linda

Linda

64 · Navy

Patty

Patty

63 · Army

Grace

Grace

59 · Coast Guard

"We made jewelry to survive deployment. We never thought anyone outside the military community would care. We were wrong."

Close-up of hands crafting jewelry
Made during the longest nights

Born From The Waiting

No factories. No assembly lines. Just six women and their hands.

Every piece in this collection was made the way they've always made them — slowly, carefully, usually at 2am when sleep wouldn't come and worry wouldn't stop.

"I'd sit at the kitchen table, wire-wrapping stones, writing letters I'd mail in the morning. It kept my hands busy so my mind wouldn't spiral." — Maggie, 68 · Army wife

The Workshop Is Closing

After 50 years, the women have decided it's time. Hands that once moved quickly now move slowly. Eyes that once threaded needles in dim light now need rest.

This collection is their goodbye — every piece they have left, offered to the world for the first and last time.

When it's gone, it's gone. And 50 years of craft goes with it.

The six women in their workshop