Liminal objects exist at the threshold.
They are not made to announce, nor to conclude.
They inhabit the moment in between — when intention forms but has not yet solidified.
In the context of jewelry, liminality is rarely addressed. Objects are often designed to signal status, identity, or belonging. Liminal objects, instead, accompany transition.
The Liminal collection was conceived from this precise state.
Each piece exists without dictating meaning.
They are neither purely symbolic nor purely decorative.
Morning Star — a liminal object
The Morning Star is not worn for decoration.
It exists at the threshold — between night and ascent, shadow and illumination.
As a liminal object, it carries tension rather than symbolism: a star suspended before dawn, neither fallen nor risen, holding the moment where transformation begins.
Within Noctara, the Morning Star embodies the object as anchor.
Not a talisman of belief, but a point of focus — something the hand returns to, something the eye recognizes, something the mind inhabits.
It does not explain. It marks a passage.
The Suspended Moment
Worn during moments of change — subtle or profound — these objects become witnesses rather than statements. They do not define who you are. They remain present as you move through becoming.
Liminal objects are chosen quietly.
They are kept close.
They are understood over time.
At Noctara, liminality is not an aesthetic.
It is a condition, defined by the in-between crossroads of life and death.
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