Silver Keyrings

Hand-wrought in our Yallingup workshop, each silver keyring is formed in solid sterling silver and shaped to elevate an everyday object into an enduring heirloom.

View by

50 Years Celebration Keyring 50 Years Celebration Keyring
Fused Keyring Fused Keyring
Rectangular Keyring Rectangular Keyring

Frequently asked questions

A keyring is handled daily — removed from pockets, placed on tables, carried without ceremony. When formed in solid sterling silver, it gains permanence rather than wear.

Instead of diminishing with use, the surface develops depth and character over time. A sterling silver keyring becomes a personal object shaped by everyday ritual.

Yes. Each design is cut and formed from solid sterling silver in our Yallingup workshop. There are no plated finishes or hollow interiors — only full material integrity.

Substance is built into the form itself. The piece feels assured in the hand from the first day and continues to hold its structure through years of daily use.

Each silver keyring is guided by the character of Western Australia’s South West. Wind-bent peppermint trees, weathered granite headlands, banksia cones, and the quiet glide of marine life beneath the Indian Ocean’s surface are just a few motifs found across our work.

Formed individually at the bench, every piece carries a sense of authorship and place — elevating a daily object into something enduring and distinctly Australian.

Yes, precisely because it is used daily rather than stored away. A sterling silver keyring gathers the imprint of routine: carried in hand, placed on timber surfaces, travelling through years of movement.

Unlike objects reserved for occasion, it accumulates memory through repetition. The silver develops a subtle patina while retaining its structure, allowing the piece to become quietly personal over time.

It is a functional object capable of carrying history.

Western Australia’s landscape, rendered in silver

Each piece is formed in solid sterling silver and detailed with engraved references to the South West — flora, fauna, and coastal forms translated into metal.

The result is both structural and illustrative, balancing restraint with narrative.

Singular, not standardised

Each keyring begins as solid sterling silver, shaped through deliberate refinement rather than moulded repetition. The circular form is resolved by eye and hand, establishing balance before detail is introduced.

No two leave the bench identical. Subtle distinctions in edge and surface preserve the authorship of the maker.

Built for daily ritual

A keyring is not occasional jewellery. It is handled repeatedly, carried constantly, and relied upon without thought.

Guided by a philosophy of slow luxury, each piece is shaped to accompany daily life for decades. The sterling silver deepens with time while the form remains steady — lasting through use rather than yielding to it.