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That conviction did not come from theory. It came from ten small silver bangles my grandmother made from the family's silver spoons when I was a child in Georgia. I never took them off, not while traveling, not through three children, not through the particular difficulty of leaving a country and rebuilding a life. They are still on my wrist. They will be there long after I am.
I work in metal, by hand, through carving and repetition and continual adjustment. I do not begin with a finished design. I begin with material and intention, and I allow form to develop gradually through the process of making. What remains in the finished piece, the irregularity, the weight, the evidence of pressure and time, is not incidental. It is the work. I am not interested in the appearance of perfection. I am interested in objects that feel as though they were made by a specific person, for a specific reason, and could not have come from anywhere else.
Many of my pieces carry an armored quality; weighted, protective, resistant. That is not an aesthetic choice made in isolation. I grew up in a country that has spent decades defending its own borders, its language, its right to exist. That does not leave you. It shapes how you relate to endurance, to protection, to what it means for something, or someone to hold its form under sustained pressure. It ends up in the metal.
I am skeptical of jewelry that exists primarily as trend, and equally skeptical of work so consumed by conceptual ambition that it loses its relationship to the body and to beauty. My own work attempts to hold both: pieces that are genuinely wearable and genuinely considered, designed to extend the identity of the person who chooses them rather than replace it.Originality, for me, is not a positioning strategy. It is a compulsion. Every piece has to feel as though it has never existed before.
I make because making gives me purpose and because I believe, without apology, that beauty produced by human hands remains necessary.
Nini Mosiashvili is a jewelry artist based in Philadelphia. Her brand, Ninimosi, produces hand formed metalwork that moves between sculptural object and wearable adornment.
She grew up in Georgia, the country, where, as a child, her grandmother gave her ten small silver bangles made from the family's silver spoons. She never took them off. Not while traveling, not through three children, not through leaving her country and building a life somewhere entirely new. They are still on her wrist. The work begins there, in the understanding that an object made by hand, given with intention, can outlive almost everything and carry the weight of a life forward.
Her pieces are fabricated by hand in metal, shaped through carving, repetition, and continual adjustment. She does not work from fixed designs. Form develops through the process of making, and the evidence of that process; irregularity, pressure, accumulated time, remains visible in the finished work. The resulting pieces carry a sculptural weight and an often-armored quality: protective, resistant, built to endure.
Alongside her studio work, she teaches jewelry-making in Philadelphia, maintaining a close relationship with material process and the necessity of making by human hand.