
THE ARTIFACTS OF TIME.



Time does not preserve, yet we try to hold onto what fades. This collection is an experiment in permanence—capturing natural forces, biological systems, and fleeting moments as tangible artifacts. Each piece is not just inspired by nature but shaped by the same fundamental processes that govern it. These are not replications, but material studies—frozen moments of evolution, corrosion, and transformation.

PIECES
The Pieces in this collection are extremely heavy on fine details which restricts me to only allocate a few units for this collection.
The Limited allocation of this collection is as follows:
Classic: 15 Pieces
Large: 10 Pieces
Oversized: 5 Pieces
Tidal Awakening
Whispers of the Deep - RESERVED
Balance in Fragmentation
NOTE: I have allocated to limit only one (1) Piece per collector. For inquiries on multiple pieces, you may send your application of interest for the Artifact Registry. This is reserved for those who have expressed genuine interest in the scientific processes of Sierra Ultra.
*Click on your preferred piece to see more details
*Reserved Pieces are held for 3 Days, Please indicate your interest to be added to the Queue.
Erosion and Renewal
Fluid Horizon
The Perfect Tension - RESERVED

Prototype Alpha - SOLD
FEATURED MATERIALS
CORAL

A fragment of an evolving landscape—this material forms like coral, not through chance, but through controlled chemistry. It does not imitate nature; it follows the same unseen rules that shape reefs over centuries. A record of time, fossilized in a moment.
RAINDROPS

Rain never leaves an artifact—it disappears the moment it touches the ground. But here, it is preserved. Each droplet remains suspended, as if gravity never reached it. A moment stolen from time, impossible in nature, yet tangible here.
WATER

Water carves landscapes, erodes mountains, and shapes civilizations—but never stands still. Here, it is captured mid-motion, like a lake frozen outside of time. Light moves across its surface, but the water itself does not. A contradiction of permanence and fluidity.
MOSS

Moss has covered ruins, statues, and relics for millennia—an archive of forgotten spaces. Here, it is reinterpreted as a woven structure, no longer soft and transient, but fossilized. A paradox: a fabric that mimics decay, yet resists time
PLANT

A plant that never withers, a structure that never rusts—this wire form is both a fossil and a blueprint. It captures the logic of botanical growth, yet resists decay. A preserved specimen from a world where nature is engineered.
STARS
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A constellation, or the last traces of civilization seen from orbit? These microscopic glass fragments mirror the way stars—or cities—scatter light across the void. A reminder that what we build, and what we see, is defined by distance and time.