Part of the Masterpieces series: a quiet exploration of light, memory and imagined landscapes by Jasper van den Ham.
One of One
A hand-painted leather journal. One of a kind.
For REVUSD, artist Jasper van den Ham transforms the AMI into something you don’t just carry, but experience. Inspired by moments where light softens and time slows, each journal reflects a quiet, imagined landscape shaped by memory and feeling.
The artwork is painted directly onto full-grain cognac leather. Not printed, not repeated. Every brushstroke is applied by hand, making each piece entirely unique.
These are not exact places, but impressions. A sense of stillness, a shift in light, a moment you recognise without knowing where from. Something subtle, yet present. Something you return to.
Designed to move with you, the AMI becomes a place for your thoughts, ideas and daily notes. A quiet companion throughout your day. Finished with a rare vintage pendant in 925 silver, set with natural orange Baltic amber, a final detail that completes the piece.
Only two exist. One A5 and one A6.
*includes 2 notebooks and a 925 silver, natural orange baltic amber - handcrafted.
Design Features
- Slim leather journal silhouette
- Minimal wrap-style construction
- Elastic cord system to hold multiple notebooks
- Unlined interior for a natural leather finish
- 100% full-grain European leather
- Made from existing premium leather
- Hand-finished edges
- Handmade in The Netherlands
- vintage pendant: 925 silver, natural orange baltic amber
Measurements
- Leather carefully hand-selected in the Netherlands
- Designed in the Netherlands
- Responsibly crafted in HOUSE of REVUSD
About the Leather
We selected this leather for its exceptional quality: soft, supple, and rich in tone. Naturally slouchy by character, it lends the bag a relaxed elegance that deepens with wear.
A material that responds to the body - supple, grounded, and alive. Each piece unique by nature and number.
About the Artist
ABOUT THE ART
Sunlit Reminiscence 3 is inspired by a quiet moment the artist experienced in the courtyard of a riad in Morocco. Stepping into that space, the noise of the outside world seemed to dissolve: sunlight rested on warm walls, shadows gathered in cool corners, and time appeared to slow.
The painting is not a literal depiction of the courtyard, but a translation of the atmosphere it created. Through color, composition and light, Van den Ham captures the softness of that memory — balancing radiance and stillness, warmth and introspection. The work invites the viewer into an inner landscape shaped by memory, where sunlight, silence and reflection come together in a moment of calm.