The legend of Rúna Sigrlinn lives on
What you see has been before, and will be again.
Long ago, when the sagas were still being written by wind and wave, there lived Runa Sigrlinn, daughter of a Norse king whose ships ruled the seas. Though born to gold and feasts, she was drawn to the deep silence of the forest.
One winter’s dusk, she found a man in the woods, cloaked in shadow. In his hands lay a heavy, circular object — cold as ice, smooth as glass. Within it swirled shifting scenes of the past and the future, marked by the golden numbers of the Younger Futhark.
“This is not for telling hours,” he told her. “Time does not pass — it turns.”
Guided by the circle’s visions, Runa ruled wisely for many seasons, her fate bound to the turning of time.
The watch that bears her name honors this ancient gift, its dial encircled by the same golden runes she once saw in the forest.
Inspired by the circle Runa once held, the watch blends Norse legend with precision craftsmanship. Its face is marked with the golden Younger Futhark numbers, its form shaped to last lifetimes — a modern relic for those who walk between past and future.
A timepiece for those who carry the weight of centuries.
Time is not a line. It is a circle — and you are already within it.