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African Currencies Collection

Cauris - Bamboo

Cauris - Bamboo

Regular price €145,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €145,00 EUR
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.
  • Free shipping from €200 — France & Luxembourg
  • 30-day returns
  • Made in Italy — 100% natural materials

Cowries, shells that are also called "porcelain", were introduced around the 8th century in West Africa by Arab traders, to become, seven centuries later, one of the currencies of reference on the continent.

Symbol of power and wealth, cowries no longer serve as currency nowadays. Nevertheless, traces of this use persist: in Ghana where the Cedi, national currency, means « cowrie” in the Twi language; or in Cotonou, Benin, where the Bank of West African States branch is adorned with architectural elements representing cowries.

A symbol of fertility, a decorative element of hair and clothing, the cowrie is also used in the divinatory arts or to adorn ritual statutes.

Lucky charm or protection from the evil eye, it adorns the costumes of ceremonial dances, warriors, hunters and statues.

Details

140X140cm

100% Bamboo

Craftsmanship & Care

Our pieces are made in a family-owned ICEA GOTS certified atelier in Como, Italy, the historic home of Italian silk. An artisanal expertise that combines tradition and environmental responsibility.

Care: dry clean only.

Shipping & Returns

Free shipping in France and Luxembourg on orders over €200.
Ships within 2 to 4 business days.

Returns are accepted within 30 days of receipt, provided the item is in its original condition, unworn and in its original packaging. More in our return policy.

For any request, contact us at contact@taaranyi.com.

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One scarf, endless ways

Each piece is designed to be worn, reinvented, and made your own.

  • Wrapped & tied

    All around the head, knotted under the chin

  • Around the neck

    The classic, reimagined

  • As wall art

    Art you can wear, or simply admire

  • Ponytail flow

    Tied at the base, cascading down your back

  • As a top

    The scarf that becomes a statement

  • On a bag

    The detail that changes everything

How to wear your Taaranyi

They love Taaranyi

Every scarf finds its own story. Here are a few of theirs.

  • @_funkefashionhouse_

  • @anna.seyser

  • @afrikalab.shop

  • @georgiana_viou

Wearing Taaranyi? Share your look with #taaranyi — we'd love to feature you.

Worn, felt, shared

Complete the story