Enri Mars calls this the Forza Bracelet, and the name fits something you feel before you read. The central ID bar is cast in sterling silver using traditional lost-wax technique in his Imola workshop, then hand-textured until its surface resembles excavated metal - cratered, scratched, pitted with dark oxidized valleys that catch shadow at every angle. Run a thumb across it: the ridges and depressions map a terrain that no machine could replicate and no two pieces share.
Where a conventional ID bracelet presents a blank canvas for engraving, this one arrives already inscribed - by process rather than script. The distressed surface carries the memory of every tool strike, every deliberate abrasion. Oval links of oxidized silver extend from either side, their structured rhythm contrasting the ID bar's raw chaos. The chain sits close and cool against the wrist, each link shifting with a faint metallic whisper as you move. At the clasp, a sturdy lobster mechanism clicks shut with quiet certainty.
The weight is honest - solid sterling silver without hollow construction. You feel the bar's cool density resting against the inner wrist, grounding and present. This is Wabi-Sabi philosophy made tangible: the imperfections are not flaws to be corrected but evidence of a hand that refused to repeat itself.

