Menu Logo
Log in

JUNE 2026 | BOOTH AT CHIJMES, SINGAPORE

Two making traditions. One summer market. Ten and eleventh of June.

There is something particular about a thing made entirely by hand, in a specific place, by a specific person. It carries that origin with it wherever it goes — onto a collar in Joo Chiat, onto a wrist on the MRT, into a room it was never designed for. That is what this Summer Market is about. Not product. Provenance.

⏰ Join us on:
Wednesday, 10 June 6-9PM
Thursday, 11 June 10AM-7PM

at 30 Victoria Street, CHIJMES.

Start with something close to the face.

The slim, gilt pin earrings carry a restraint that takes confidence to wear — thin as a brushstroke, quiet as a held breath. They don't seek volume. They make space around themselves. The kind of piece that catches light midway through a conversation and makes someone pause without quite knowing why.

Alongside them, small earrings in a warm finish sit flush against the skin — understated in the hand, unmistakable once worn. Jewellery that asks nothing. Offers everything.

Trovelore — a women-led studio in India, making creatures from thread and wire.

Every Trovelore piece begins in a small studio in India, in the hands of a team of women who build jewellery the way a sculptor builds form — slowly, deliberately, from the inside out. The goldfish earrings are made feather by feather, each textured layer worked by hand until the piece holds both weight and lightness at once. The star earrings arrive in a warm blush, spiny and soft together, like something the tide brought in and someone decided to keep.

These are not mass-produced pieces. Each one takes hours. Each one is slightly different from the last.

Hold one and you understand why.

The Himi Blouse and Dress

The colour does not sit on the surface. It moves through the cloth — navy deepening at the hem, releasing into amber, breaking finally into pale gold at the shoulder. The Tie Dye Himi Blouse and Dress carry this gradation as their entire grammar. No print, no pattern. Just colour doing what colour does when water and time are given room.

Other pieces in the collection take a different path. Hand-patched in Udaipur, the fabric is worked by artisans who piece together cloth by hand, panel by panel, in a tradition that turns making into architecture.

Worn loose, worn layered, worn simply on a warm June morning — they are clothes that already know how to move.

The Summer Market is not a sale. It is two days when the things we believe in most — handmade, far-travelled, honestly crafted — come out from behind the glass and onto the street. Trovelore. Himi. Udaipur. Joo Chiat. Four places, one corner, ten and eleven June.

Come early. Some things only exist once.