Skulls, Serpents, and Flowers
In Día de los Muertos imagery, the skull is not a symbol of fear – it's a portrait of someone loved and remembered. The serpent represents the cycle of renewal, shedding its skin and beginning again. The flowers are the bridge between the living and the dead, placed on ofrendas and graves to welcome spirits home. The Turquesa brings all three together on a single dial, each element painted by hand in a tradition that treats death as another chapter, not the final one.

