Where Color Meets Fire — The Art of Enamel at ORE3

Enamel is shaped by repetition, heat, and risk


Each piece is built through repeated layers of color, carefully applied and fired again and again — often up to seven times — until depth and luminosity emerge.

This process cannot be automated or mass-produced. Every piece is quietly one of a kind.



The Craft Behind Each Piece

A twenty-day journey of fire and precision, resulting in a singular piece.
1. Hand-Drawn Design

Each piece begins with hand-drawn sketches.
Form, proportion, and movement are carefully considered before any material is shaped.

2. Wax Modeling

The design is translated into a wax model, sculpted by hand.
This stage defines the final structure and delicate details of the piece.

3. Creating the Metal Base

The wax model is cast into metal, forming the base that will carry the enamel.
This metal foundation must withstand repeated high-temperature firings while preserving precision.

4. Enamel Coloring & Repeated Firings

Enamel is applied by hand, layer by layer.
Each color is fired at high temperatures and carefully built up through multiple firings — often up to seven times — to achieve depth and luminosity.
At every firing, failure is still possible.

5. Stone Setting & Assembly

Once the enamel work is complete, stones are set and individual components are assembled by hand, adding balance and refinement to the final form.

6. The Birth of an Enamel Piece

From the first sketch to final assembly, a single piece takes approximately 20 days to complete.
No two outcomes are ever the same — each enamel creation is truly one of a kind.