
For STUTTERHEIM, rain is more than weather, it's an identity. The Swedish brand has built its name on transforming grey skies and wet streets into a global design language, where protection and style are stitched into every garment.
Siadds Atelier, founded by stylist Richard Ntege, takes a different but equally elemental approach. Working with recycled sterling silver, the jewellery studio uses metal as a vessel for storytelling, a way to hold landscapes, memory, and heritage within sculptural forms.
Together, the two brands ask a simple question: what happens if you freeze the moment a raindrop hits a raincoat, and cast it in silver? The answer comes in two objects: a ring and a pair of earrings where water and metal meet in a reflective dialogue.
The collaboration is not about adornment in the conventional sense. Instead, the pieces act as echoes of elemental forces. Stutterheim’s rainwear shields against weather; Siadds Atelier’s jewellery preserves it. One protects, the other remembers. Both carry an understated clarity, a quality found in Scandinavian design but enriched here by the layered presence of East African heritage.
The tension between these worlds, Stockholm’s muted skies and East Africa’s piercing sun defines the collaboration. Utility meets symbolism, minimalism meets memory. The result is less a seasonal collection than an exploration of how objects can capture experiences: how rain, usually something to resist, might become something to wear.
Available from September 18 on stutterheim.com