
The series is constituted from an internal impulse where embodied memory, landscape, and inheritance converge, activating a material translation of Yoreme identity in a contemporary key. Silversmith and Yoreme collections emerge as a dialogue between earth and memory, where metal becomes language and ancestry takes form. Rooted in the traditions of the Yoreme people of Northern Mexico, each piece carries the quiet strength of lineage—honoring hands that shaped land, stories, and spirit across generations.
Through silversmithing, raw material is transformed into sculptural intimacy: textures echoing desert winds, organic forms recalling seeds, bones, and sacred geometries. The work bridges past and present, weaving indigenous identity with contemporary design sensibilities influenced by cross-cultural experiences.
These collections are not merely adornment, but vessels—holding narratives of resilience, belonging, and reverence for the natural world. Each piece invites the wearer into a deeper connection with heritage, craftsmanship, and the enduring poetry of material.
A tribute to the ancestral strength of the Yoreme people, the Cahitas Rings Collection emerges from the earth-bound wisdom, ritual beauty, and subtle geometry of northern Mexico’s indigenous heritage. Explore Cahitas Collection.

This body of work emerges from an inherited place — one shaped not by formal learning, but by memory, lineage, and lived connection. It carries the presence of my grandparents, the land we worked together, and the hands that shaped clay long before my own. This is where my practice begins. Explore Yoremes Collection.

Guardian of the Hidden Seed. At the heart of this piece lies the subtle symbolism of a coffee grain—a seed not native to Yoreme territory, yet universally understood as a bearer of awakening, nourishment, and connection. By integrating the concept of the coffee grain, the ring bridges worlds: the native soil of Sinaloa and a foreign seed that traveled continents, much like cultural knowledge moves, adapts, and survives. Here, the coffee grain becomes a metaphor for migration, exchange, and resilience. It represents how traditions—like seeds—can take root in unexpected places, carrying strength, aroma, and story. In Yoreme philosophy, every seed holds a spirit, a promise. Explore Tehueco Collection.

Forged through the ancient discipline of lost-wax casting, this ring design pays homage to the enigmatic Xiximes — one of the most remote and resilient peoples of the Sierra Madre Occidental, whose presence once touched the highlands between Sinaloa and Durango. The forms echo the fragmented memory of their vanished world: rugged, serrano, untamed. The silver structure evokes the raw mineral heart of the mountains, while the sepia patina carries the mark of time, recalling the weathered surfaces of stone shelters, tools, and ritual fragments described in early chronicles. A delicate 14k gold bath crowns the piece, invoking the ceremonial glow and transformative force embedded in Xixime cosmology. As both ring and pendant, the design becomes a wearable contemporary relic — a gesture of remembrance honoring a people whose voices were silenced, yet whose presence still lingers in the land. Explore Cahitas Collection.
Explore more Herrería Fina.

The series is constituted from an internal impulse where embodied memory, landscape, and inheritance converge, activating a material translation of Yoreme identity in a contemporary key. Silversmith and Yoreme collections emerge as a dialogue between earth and memory, where metal becomes language and ancestry takes form. Rooted in the traditions of the Yoreme people of Northern Mexico, each piece carries the quiet strength of lineage—honoring hands that shaped land, stories, and spirit across generations.
Through silversmithing, raw material is transformed into sculptural intimacy: textures echoing desert winds, organic forms recalling seeds, bones, and sacred geometries. The work bridges past and present, weaving indigenous identity with contemporary design sensibilities influenced by cross-cultural experiences.
These collections are not merely adornment, but vessels—holding narratives of resilience, belonging, and reverence for the natural world. Each piece invites the wearer into a deeper connection with heritage, craftsmanship, and the enduring poetry of material.
A tribute to the ancestral strength of the Yoreme people, the Cahitas Rings Collection emerges from the earth-bound wisdom, ritual beauty, and subtle geometry of northern Mexico’s indigenous heritage. Explore Cahitas Collection.

This body of work emerges from an inherited place — one shaped not by formal learning, but by memory, lineage, and lived connection. It carries the presence of my grandparents, the land we worked together, and the hands that shaped clay long before my own. This is where my practice begins. Explore Yoremes Collection.

Guardian of the Hidden Seed. At the heart of this piece lies the subtle symbolism of a coffee grain—a seed not native to Yoreme territory, yet universally understood as a bearer of awakening, nourishment, and connection. By integrating the concept of the coffee grain, the ring bridges worlds: the native soil of Sinaloa and a foreign seed that traveled continents, much like cultural knowledge moves, adapts, and survives. Here, the coffee grain becomes a metaphor for migration, exchange, and resilience. It represents how traditions—like seeds—can take root in unexpected places, carrying strength, aroma, and story. In Yoreme philosophy, every seed holds a spirit, a promise. Explore Tehueco Collection.

Forged through the ancient discipline of lost-wax casting, this ring design pays homage to the enigmatic Xiximes — one of the most remote and resilient peoples of the Sierra Madre Occidental, whose presence once touched the highlands between Sinaloa and Durango. The forms echo the fragmented memory of their vanished world: rugged, serrano, untamed. The silver structure evokes the raw mineral heart of the mountains, while the sepia patina carries the mark of time, recalling the weathered surfaces of stone shelters, tools, and ritual fragments described in early chronicles. A delicate 14k gold bath crowns the piece, invoking the ceremonial glow and transformative force embedded in Xixime cosmology. As both ring and pendant, the design becomes a wearable contemporary relic — a gesture of remembrance honoring a people whose voices were silenced, yet whose presence still lingers in the land. Explore Cahitas Collection.
Explore more Herrería Fina.