The Hermès Scarf Kawa Ora, designed by Te Rangitu Netana. As stated in the Hermès catalogue: Te Rangitu Netana, a Maori tattoo artist took inspiration from the life of his ancestors and Maori culture to design this scarf. An owl, the messenger between the material and spiritual worlds, rises above the four walls that draw the house of the tribe's meeting place. Knowledge and a connection to the sky are represented on the northern wall, creation and water on the southern, light and the giant eagle on which the Maori have travelled on the eastern. The albatross tears represent the suffering of the Maori people in the western. The central circle represents a giant octopus, a symbol of navigation, and its tentacles, the eight directions of the Maori compass, in a spirited crossing of cultures.
The necklace features a large pendant with a three-layer cascade and tassel. There are six different shapes of the handmade beads, and each handmade bead has its unique swirl patterns with the colours of peacock blue, teal, aqua, copper, and white.
The pendant represents the seawater swirl created by the magical and powerful creatures. Above the pendant is the three-layer cascade which means a thousand layers of waves against the shore. The tassel appears for the lights in the ocean, and seas that glow like stars. Along with the Swarovski stars, there are the seashells, pearls and mother-of-pearl...
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