Elsewhere Goods is a materially driven practice rooted in play, experimentation, and the joy of making and adornment. What began as jewelry has grown into a broader exploration of wearable and livable objects—clothing, home goods, and sculptural works—each conceived with the same attention to form, texture, and feeling. Pieces are designed to move between body and space: small sculptures to wear, objects to live with, and forms that invite interaction in everyday life while retaining the spirit of the studio, the hand, and the imagination that made them.
Rather than following trends, Elsewhere Goods is led by curiosity, material availability, and artistic impulse. Vintage, deadstock, and secondhand materials form the foundation of the work, allowing each piece to carry its own history. This approach creates an evolving body of work that is cohesive yet open-ended—where garments, furniture, quilts, and adornments exist in conversation, unified by a tactile language and a distinctly human sensibility.