06/01/2026
May this love find me.
I’ve been thinking about how devotion feels like a dying art.
Everything moves so quickly now: people, attention spans, relationships, even the way we consume beauty. Myself included. We are constantly taught to chase the next thing instead of deeply honoring what we already love.
To be eternally devoted means to love, cherish, and commit to something with consistency over time beyond trends, moods, or temporary circumstances. A person. An art form. A purpose. A memory. A way of living. Even devotion to yourself and your vision.
“Eternal” implies permanence, but devotion is active. It’s intentional care. Reverence. Loyalty. Showing up again and again for the things that move you. This collection was born from that feeling.
Pieces designed with devotion to beauty, craftsmanship, emotion, and the women who wear them.
The Eternal Devotion Collection has arrived ♡
xo Lady Lana
If anyone has the original creator of the images please let us know ;) In order of appearance:
1. Source unknown
2. Source unknownThis imagery often symbolizes the “Red Thread of Fate”, a concept originating from Chinese mythology that suggests two people connected by an invisible string are destined to be together.
3. Renowned ballet dancers Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev.
4. Leonardo Bistolfi Sculpture
5. Scene from the 1928 silent film Sadie Thompson.
6. This image is a painting by Italian artist Lorenzo Mattotti, specifically titled “Vampiri” (The Vampires) from 1994.
7. Quote by author and poet Mark Anthony.
8. Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck in a scene from the 1953 film Roman Holiday.
9. ISource unknown
10. Sean Connery with actress Claudine Auger on the set of the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball.
11. Jean Arthur and Gary Cooper in a scene from the 1936 film Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.
12. Source unknown
13. This photograph, titled “The Hug, Coney Island, 1982,” was taken by artist Harvey Stein
14. 1969 film Une Femme Douce (A Gentle Woman), directed by Robert Bresson.
15. 1926 silent film Der Rosenkavalier, which was directed by Robert Wiene.
16. Source unknown