A light-first minimalist jewelry house storefront. Cool tonal grayscale palette, sans-first body with the brand serif reserved for the wordmark. Includes a 4-page catalogue plus a numbered short-form blog. Built for small jewelry studios and slow-fashion brands.
A minimalist jewelry house in tonal grayscale and cream, built around hand-finished product photography.
Earrings, bracelets, necklaces, and rings with a URL-synced category filter and live result count.
Long-form studio essays and a numbered short-form blog with tag filters, all rendered from local data.
A navbar toggle inverts paper and ink in place and remembers your choice in the browser.
Mobile menu, focus-trapped dialogs, reduced-motion support, and reserved scrollbar gutter throughout.
Production-ready features built into the scaffold from day one.
Vesper is a light-first storefront for a small minimalist jewelry house. It frames sterling silver and recycled bronze pieces as editorial objects: a full-bleed cinematic hero, a twelve-piece catalogue you can filter by category, product pages with size and quantity controls, and a simulated bag and checkout. Around the shop sit two writing surfaces, a Journal of long-form essays and a numbered studio blog, plus an About page, support pages, and a search dialog.
The craft is in the restraint. The palette is a tonal grayscale and cream built on a near-black ink, a soft muted grey, hairline rules, off-white paper, and a warm wash for image plates. Body copy is set in Inter while the brand serif, Playfair Display, is reserved for the wordmark and the single editorial headline in the studio note. Generous tracking on small uppercase labels, hairline borders, and 4:5 image crops give every page the same quiet, gallery-like rhythm. The default register is light, with a dusk mode that inverts paper and ink in place.
List a small, considered catalogue with category filtering, detailed product pages, and a simulated bag and checkout. The shop is frontend-only, so the cart and checkout demonstrate the full flow without charging or storing anything.
Lean on the Journal and the numbered blog to tell a materials-and-process story alongside the catalogue. Both read from local data, so adding or rewriting posts is just editing content.
The quiet palette, hand-finished photography, and About-and-support pages suit any maker selling a handful of pieces with a strong point of view, from ceramics to leather goods.
Start from Vesper in mythos.new with a single click. Remixing forks the full project into your own private repo so you can edit everything freely.
In the in-browser IDE and chat, swap the wordmark, product photos, copy, and palette, and replace the catalogue, journal, and blog content with your own. Ask the builder to restyle sections or wire forms and checkout to a real backend through your own Supabase when you are ready.
When it looks right, publish straight to a <name>.r21.dev subdomain. Keep iterating in chat and republish anytime.