The Spirit
of EDÓ
Authenticity is the new luxury
EDÓ was founded on a simple premise:
Jewelry should not be a costume. It should be an extension of the self.
Hand-woven bead-by-bead in the heart of Budapest, our bracelets are a testament to the art of the slow craft.
This isn't just a bracelet; it’s a masterpiece of patience you can wear.
The Luxury
of Time
The EDÓ Collection
Within an EDÓ box lies a masterpiece of patience and precision. Each piece features intrinsic patterns of hand-made chevrons, meticulously woven bead-by-bead to create a tapestry of structural elegance.
This is more than jewelry; it is a wearable fragment of the soul, where stylish heritage meets modern artistry.
We invite you to feel the weight of authentic craftsmanship and carry our dedication to timeless, artisanal beauty with every wear.
Edit Fenyo
Founder & Creator
Edit Fenyo is the artistic visionary behind EDÓ, infusing each piece with her deep-seated passion for wearable forms and understated elegance. With a background in dance & modern art and a meticulous eye for detail, Edit believes jewelry should be an intimate extension of the self, not merely an adornment.
Her dedication to timeless design ensures every creation is "Quietly Extraordinary" and crafted to be cherished for generations, embracing the brand's slow-creation ethos and commitment to enduring beauty.
Linoy Zucker
Commercial Manager
Linoy brings the conscience and innovative spirit to EDÓ. Driven by a commitment to sustainability and ethical practices, Linoy leads the brand's dedication to using recycled materials and friendly practices. She champions the unique blend of modern technology meets old-world hands.
Linoy's vision ensures EDÓ remains a pioneer in responsible luxury, proving that exquisite craftsmanship and ethical production can coexist harmoniously.
The Story Behind EdoMade
There's a period in Japanese history that quietly shaped everything we believe about craft.
The Edo period, stretching from the early 17th century to the late 19th, was an era of extraordinary refinement. Before it was named Tokyo, the capital of Japan was called Edo, during those times Japan turned inward, and in that stillness, something remarkable happened. Artisans had time. Time to perfect a single technique across a lifetime. Time to pass it to their children, who passed it to theirs. But what makes this era truly remarkable, in hindsight, is something else: it was almost entirely circular.
With trade closed off from the outside world, nothing could be wasted. Broken ceramics were repaired with gold, the art of kintsugi, turning damage into beauty. Old kimono fabric was cut and resewn into children's clothes, then into cleaning cloths, then into paper. Metal was melted down and recast. Craftsmen worked with what existed, and in doing so, created some of the most enduring objects in human history. Sustainability wasn't a value they chose, it was the discipline that made them great. That spirit is where EDO began.
When we started making bracelets, we weren't thinking about trends or collections. We were thinking about the things we'd want to keep forever, and the people we'd want to give them to. We were thinking about what it means to make something by hand, with attention, and with love for the person who will wear it.
EDO is named according to that era because we share its values. Slow over fast. Enduring over disposable. Materials chosen with care, not consumed without thought. Made with someone specific in mind, not manufactured for everyone in general.
Every bracelet we make carries a small piece of that philosophy, and a small piece of us.