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S I M A T A

Dots and dashes. The whole alphabet.

Before texts. Before emails. Before phone calls.
There was a code that crossed oceans.

HOW THE CODE WORKS

Three simple things, and you'll understand it forever.

A short. A long.

Morse code is built from just two sounds.
A short tap. A long tap.
That's the whole alphabet.

A • –
B – • • •
C – • – •

Every letter is a small pattern of shorts and longs.
A is short-long. B is long-short-short-short. C is long-short-long-short.

H • • • •
E
L • – • •
L • – • •
O – – –

String the patterns together, and you can write any word.
A name. A feeling. A secret.

That's it. You already understand Morse code.

Now, try yours.

Type a word – your name, someone you love, anything that matters.

Send it to someone who'll know what it means.

TWO LOVE STORIES

The Telegrapher's Wedding, 1800s

In 1848, two people got married – but the groom wasn't there. He was miles away, at another telegraph station. His vows traveled through wires in dots and dashes, arriving letter by letter. It was the first wedding conducted in code. They couldn't see each other. But every word came through.

The Lovers Who Wrote Across the War, 1944

A British soldier and a nurse, separated by the front lines, wrote each other in Morse code. Letters were censored. Phone calls were impossible. So they hid messages inside the dots and dashes – three short, three long, three short. A code within a code, only they could read.

The Whole Alphabet

Click any letter to hear its Morse code sound.

Did You Know?

The letter E is just a single dot – because E is the most‑used letter in English.

Did You Know?

SOS isn't an abbreviation. It was chosen because • • • – – – • • • is the easiest pattern to recognize.

Did You Know?

Morse code is still used today by amateur radio operators, the military, and aviation in emergency situations.

Hands threading Morse code beads into a SIMATA bracelet
FROM CODE TO CRAFT

I turn words into wearable secrets.

When I learned that sailors used Morse code to send love letters across oceans, something shifted.

This wasn't just an old technology. It was a way to carry the most important words quietly – close to the body, hidden in plain sight.

So I started translating words into beads. A small bead is a dot. A long bead is a dash. Together, they form a word only you understand.

Every piece I make in my Cyprus studio is one word – yours.

See the Bracelet →

Handmade in Cyprus · Free UN shipping over €50 · Ships worldwide