-
Healing Hydra Mist
Aveta Hydra Mist effectively addresses facial dehydration, replenishing the skin’s moisture while restoring its protective barrier. It helps alleviate facial fatigue and dullness, reduces hypersensitivity and inflammation, and leaves the skin feeling refreshed and brighter.
Aveta Healing Formula helps repair damaged skin, reduces redness, and offers protection against the harmful effects of wind and sun. It is also gentle enough for children’s sensitive skin.
When carefully selected plants and flowers are steamed to capture their essence, they are transformed into a hydrosol. This hydrosol is then blended and enriched with other beneficial ingredients, creating Aveta—a natural elixir that nourishes and quenches your skin’s thirst, delivered to you by the pure power of nature.
Sprayable Bouquet: Chamomile • Lavender • Calendula
For Sensitive and Damaged Skin
Size: 50ml$14.90Healing Hydra Mist
$14.90 -
“Gold Button Patch” Silver Bracelet
A 925 sterling silver bracelet
$112.00 -
-
Elegant Women’s Enamel-Coated Silver Pendant
The silver pendant is the essence of luxury in its simplest and most elegant form. This piece of jewelry is perfect for those who appreciate minimalism and natural beauty.
$45.00$55.00Elegant Women’s Enamel-Coated Silver Pendant
$45.00$55.00 -
-
Knitted Bear Doll
Bears made of baby acrylic yarn do not cause allergies. Military style clothing. The price is for one.
$12.00Knitted Bear Doll
$12.00 -
Leather Bracelet with Cross for Men and Women, Silver bar
Leather & Silver Bracelet for Men and Women, Genuine Leather and Sterling silver bar with Armenian Cross, Cuff Bracelet Gift for him for Her
$39.00 -
Handmade Leather Shoes
Handmade natural leather comfortable winter boots
Size (EU) 20- 42
For men, for women, for kids, for boys and girls$65.00 – $80.00Handmade Leather Shoes
$65.00 – $80.00 -
“Armenian Ceramics” Scarf
Jerusalem’s ancient Armenian community experienced a major increase in numbers as survivors of the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the government of the Ottoman Empire beginning in 1915 found refuge in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter. The industry is believed to have been started by refugees from Kütahya, a city in western Anatolia noted for its Iznik pottery. The tiles decorate many of the city’s most notable buildings, including the Rockefeller Museum, American Colony Hotel, and the House of the President of Israel.
David Ohannessian (1884–1953), who had established a pottery in Kütahya in 1907, is credited with establishing the Armenian ceramic craft industry in Jerusalem. In 1911 Ohannessian was commissioned with installing Kütahya tile in the Yorkshire home of Mark Sykes. In 1919 Ohannessian and his family fled the Armenian genocide, finding temporary refuge in Aleppo; they moved to Jerusalem when Sykes suggested that they might be able to replicate the broken and missing tiles on the Dome of the Rock, a building then in a decayed and neglected condition. Although the commission for the Dome of the Rock did not come through, the Ohannession pottery in Jerusalem succeeded, as did the Karakashian the painters and Balian the potters that Ohannessian brought with him from Kuttahya to help him with the project in 1919. After about 60 years new Armenian artists started to have their own studios.
In 2019 the Israel Museum mounted a special exhibition of Jerusalem pottery in its Rockefeller Museum branch location.$110.00“Armenian Ceramics” Scarf
$110.00 -
“Pomegranate” Gold Earrings
POM Noor gold plated stud dainty drop earrings with a single delicate Pomegranate hanging off.
length drop about 3” long
$32.95“Pomegranate” Gold Earrings
$32.95 -