Meteorite Silver Jewelry
STRUGA · Meteorite Jewelry
A fragment of iron older than the Earth's crust, fused into silver.
STRUGA meteorite jewelry is built around real Seymchan meteorite — an iron-nickel meteorite recovered in the Magadan region of far-eastern Siberia — fused into 925 sterling silver by hand in Bali. Each piece is one of one: a meteorite section is cut from a single mass, so no two share the same edge or crystalline grain.
This is genuine extraterrestrial iron, not a texture or a simulant. The metal that fell is set against living silver that ages with wear — two materials with two clocks, one running in millions of years, the other in the years you wear it.
Meteorite jewelry — straight answers
Is this a real meteorite?
Yes — genuine Seymchan meteorite, an iron-nickel meteorite first recovered in 1967 in the Magadan region of far-eastern Russia. It is the actual metal that fell, not a meteorite-style finish or a simulant.
Why is every piece one of a kind?
A meteorite section is sliced from a single mass. Its grain, edge and inclusions belong to that one slice, so each necklace is unique and cannot be reproduced exactly.
How do I care for meteorite jewelry?
Keep the meteorite dry — raw iron can rust if left damp. Wipe it after wear and store it dry. The surrounding 925 sterling silver develops a Living Silver patina, which is intended and can be brightened with a cloth.
What is Seymchan?
A meteorite first recovered in 1967 near Seymchan in the Magadan region of Russia. It is valued for its iron-nickel structure and, in its pallasite sections, embedded olivine — a material that formed in space long before it reached Earth.





