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Go to the shopThis marble jewellery box is shaped from white marble and inlaid with semi-precious stones in the Mughal pietra dura tradition, locally called pacchikari or parchin kari. Agra is the craft's modern home, where workshops near the Taj Mahal still set lapis lazuli, malachite, mother-of-pearl, and carnelian by hand into chiselled marble.
Sized for rings, chains, earrings, and small heirlooms. Each piece reads as quiet on a dresser, ornate up close.
Minor glaze and color variations are natural and add character. Handle with care. Wipe with a soft, damp cloth. Avoid harsh chemicals and prolonged direct sun exposure.
Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.
A jewellery box is one of the few objects you keep visible for a lifetime, which is the role this one is built for, and where it sits in a room decides how much of the inlay you actually notice day to day.
On the dresser. Place the box on a vanity, dresser, or bedside table where natural light reaches the inlay. The semi-precious stones (lapis, malachite, mother-of-pearl, carnelian, turquoise) read differently in morning side-light than under a lamp. Avoid direct south-facing afternoon sun, which can dull stone colour over years.
What goes inside. Best for rings, stud earrings, fine chains, mangalsutras, single strands of beads, lockets, and small sentiment pieces that need a hand-finding place. Bulkier statement jewellery is better in a tray. The box is not built for heavy bangle stacks; the weight stresses the inlay over time.
As a gift. The marble inlay box is the canonical Indian heirloom gift, given at griha pravesh, weddings, milestone birthdays, retirements, and at scale for high-end corporate gifting. The Taj Mahal connection tells the story for you; no further sales pitch is needed when the box is in the recipient's hand.
Daily handling. Open and close slowly. The hinge is the highest-wear part of any inlay box. Lift the lid by the front edge, not by pressing on the inlay pattern itself.
Care in use. Marble is calcium carbonate, which reacts to acids. Keep the box away from perfume, lemon juice, vinegar, nail polish remover, alcohol-based hand sanitiser, and strong cleaners. If something spills, blot immediately with a soft dry cloth rather than wiping, since wiping spreads the etch.
For routine cleaning, a slightly damp microfibre cloth with plain water is enough. Dry the surface afterwards.
The craft is called pietra dura in Italian and parchin kari or pacchikari in the Mughal vocabulary that has survived in Agra workshops for nearly four centuries, ever since Shah Jahan brought specialists from Persia in the seventeenth century to work on the Taj Mahal and other monuments, and the same family lines have practised the inlay since. A small jewellery box passes through five sets of hands.
The marble blank. The body is cut from white Makrana marble quarried in Rajasthan, the same stone used at the Taj. Makrana is prized because it is soft enough to incise cleanly but durable enough to outlast its owners. The box is shaped, joined, and polished smooth before any inlay begins.
Stone selection. The inlay stones are sorted before cutting: lapis lazuli for deep blue, malachite for green, mother-of-pearl for pale shimmer, carnelian for red-orange, jasper, turquoise, and onyx for darker accents. A master decides what each motif will be made of.
Cutting the inlay pieces. Each piece is cut by hand from the parent stone with an emery wheel and shaped with small files to the exact silhouette the floral pattern requires. A single flower can contain forty individual pieces, each smaller than a fingernail. The fit must be tight enough that no adhesive is visible at the surface.
Chiselling and setting. The marble is incised with small chisels to receive each stone in its exact place. The pieces are seated with natural adhesive and pressed flush. The match is judged by touch: a good join feels seamless under a finger.
Final polish. The whole surface is polished in stages to a mirror finish that reads both the marble and the stones as one continuous plane. This last step is what makes a good inlay piece look like one carved object rather than many.
The work is done by the Agra inlay artisan cluster.
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