
Seis Collection — Six Plants, Six Biomes, One Earth.
Botanical knowledge and ancestral wisdom woven through the roots, leaves, and flowers of Brazil.
What is the Seis Collection?
The Seis Collection is a living tribute to Brazil’s natural and cultural richness — a journey through six sacred plants, each rooted in one of the country’s six major biomes: Amazon, Cerrado, Caatinga, Atlantic Forest, Pantanal, and Pampa. These plants are more than biological specimens; they are keepers of memory, symbols of resilience, and messengers of the land.
Each species in this collection holds a unique place in both botanical science and ancestral knowledge. For millennia, these plants have offered medicine, meaning, and spiritual guidance to the communities that live with them. Their stories reveal how the Earth teaches not only through growth and bloom — but through silence, survival, and sacred timing.
Meet The Six Plants
Living Threads of a Fragile Earth — A Tribute to Native Ecosystems.
In a time of accelerating climate change and biodiversity loss, we are being called—not only to protect the natural world, but to remember our place within it. The Seis Collection is more than a celebration of six plants; it is an invitation to reconnect with the living memory held in Brazil’s forests, rivers, and soils.
Each plant in this collection is a bridge between worlds. They are not simply botanical entities, but keepers of stories, ceremonies, and survival. For generations, Indigenous peoples have walked in relationship with these beings, learning from their rhythms, respecting their medicines, and honoring their roles as guardians of balance and life.
To preserve these plants is to protect not just ecological diversity, but the ancestral knowledge systems that recognize plants as teachers, not just resources. In them lives a biocultural memory—the interwoven intelligence of nature and culture—that offers guidance, healing, and resilience for a world in need of remembering.
Let this collection remind us: when we care for the Earth and listen to those who know her best, we begin to heal not only landscapes, but our shared future.