Ogham, blessings and legend — carved by hand into natural slate from the edge of the Atlantic. A piece of Ireland, cut to last a lifetime.
Long before the harbours and the guidebooks, the people of this coast wrote in lines and notches along the edge of a stone — ogham, the first Irish writing. We carry those old marks, the blessings and the legends, back into slate drawn from the western shore. Nothing loud. Just the quiet weight of a thing meant to be kept.
Discover the heritageDiscover the heritage→Natural Irish slate, split along its grain. Cool, heavy, and honest in the hand — the same stone that roofs the cottages and walls the fields of Clare. No two pieces carry exactly the same face.
Shop the slateShop the slate→An alphabet of lines, each letter named for a tree. We carve names, blessings and the sayings passed down at firesides — go n-éirí an bóthar leat, may the road rise up to meet you — into stone that will outlast the saying of them.
The ogham stonesThe ogham stones→The children of Lir, the salmon of all knowledge, the Morrígan watching as a raven. The legends of Ireland, rendered as quiet line-work in slate — old gods for a modern wall.
Enter the mythsEnter the myths→Ogham is an alphabet of strokes, read along a stem like a finger following the worked edge of a standing stone — twenty letters, four families, each named for a tree. Type a name or a word, watch it carved, then have it made real in slate.
The feather marks bracket the inscription and show where to begin — a manuscript convention. Ancient stones often had none.
Stone reads bottom to top, as inscriptions run up the edge of a pillar. Sounds with no native sign map to the nearest letter — K→C, P→B, V·W→F, J·Y→I, X→C.
Have your name carved in slate — from €45 ↗We are a small workshop on the coast of County Clare, where the weather is dramatic and the legends run deep. Every piece is cut, set and engraved by hand, then wrapped to travel — so a little of the Wild Atlantic Way can find a wall anywhere in the world.
Find your stoneFind your stone→New pieces, old legends, and ten per cent off your first stone. Sent rarely, never noisily.
Unsubscribe anytime. Slán go fóill.