Patricia's Bloom Copper Bracelet
Patricia's Bloom Copper Bracelet
What My Customers Are Saying
My kitchen windowsill has a row of small things I've kept over the years — a river stone, a button from my mother's coat, a copper petal I stamped out the first time I tried this pattern and got it wrong. I kept that petal to remind myself what getting it right eventually looks like.
The flowers on this bracelet are engraved one at a time, each petal pressed separately with a tool I've had since the late seventies. The vine that connects them I trace freehand, slowly, all the way around the band. It takes as long as it takes. I've never once rushed it.
I made this one for the days when your wrists have been making themselves known — that low, persistent ache that shows up in the morning and lingers longer than it used to. The women who've worn my floral pieces longest are the ones who stop mentioning their wrists altogether. Not because nothing changed. Because something did.
This bracelet came out of my Coalgate workshop during the last season I'll ever make them. The engraving tool that traced every petal is retired now, same as I am. This piece is finished, ready, and looking for the wrist it was always meant for.
Material: 99.9% Pure Copper
Most of what gets sold as copper jewelry online is plated — a thin copper wash over steel or brass that looks right in a photograph and feels wrong the moment it's in your hand. It fades. It doesn't work. And it gives real copper a reputation it doesn't deserve.
Here's the test I tell everyone to do the day their order arrives:
Pull a magnet off your refrigerator. Hold it against the piece. Real copper has no iron in it — a magnet won't respond to it at all. If it sticks even a little, it's not pure copper. Send me a photo and I'll refund you on the spot, no back-and-forth needed.
Mine has never failed that test in fifty years. I don't expect it to start now.
These pieces are already made. Every one of them was shaped by my hands in the workshop here in Coalgate — finished and ready, waiting for the right person.
When you order, I pack it myself, wrap it carefully, and get it out the door within 1 to 3 business days. No waiting on production. Just one of the last pieces I'll ever make, on its way to you.
Pure copper changes with wear — it darkens, deepens, takes on a warmth that the bright new finish doesn't have. Most of my long-time customers prefer it that way. They say it starts to look like theirs.
When you want to bring the shine back, mix a little lemon juice with a pinch of table salt. Rub it gently over the surface, rinse with warm water, dry it well. That's all it takes. Nothing special. Nothing you don't already have in your kitchen.
For the full care guide, click HERE
I ship free to every corner in the world. No minimum order, no codes, nothing to figure out at checkout.
Every order leaves my workshop hand-packed — wrapped the way I'd wrap something I was sending to a neighbor, not dropped in a poly bag by a machine. It matters to me that it arrives the way it was meant to.
Once your order ships you'll get a tracking number so you can follow it home.
United States: 5–12 Business Days
International: 6–15 Business Days

