How a career in global spirits led to discovering authentic malas, sacred incense, and the artisans who still craft by hand
By Jonathan Mather, Managing Director, Artisan d'Asie
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👉 From Luxury Brands to Mindful Commerce — Why I Rebuilt My Life Around Handcrafted Asian Artistry
Published by Artisan d'Asie — bridging authentic Asian craftsmanship with mindful modern living.
After decades building luxury brands like The Macallan, Jim Beam, and Laurent-Perrier across four continents, I found myself asking a question I couldn't ignore:
What's the purpose of success without meaning?
That question doesn't come with easy answers. It requires you to sit with discomfort. To examine what you've built and ask whether it reflects who you actually are — or who you thought you should be.
For years, I didn't have the courage to answer honestly.
Then life answered for me.
Sometimes transformation isn't a choice — it's survival.
I won't catalog every loss. But I will say this: when your career, your relationships, and your sense of identity collapse simultaneously, you face a defining choice.
You can try to rebuild the same structure. Or you can ask what you actually want to build.
I chose the latter. Not out of wisdom. Out of exhaustion.
I didn't have the energy to pretend anymore.
In 2025, I discovered a small, nearly forgotten eCommerce brand curating handcrafted spiritual pieces from artisans across Asia.
Authentic malas hand-knotted in Kathmandu. Incense blessed in Tibetan monasteries. Siamese rosewood jewelry boxes carved by fourth-generation masters in Chiang Mai whose craft is slowly disappearing.
Where others saw a relic, I saw resonance.
This wasn't just a business selling Buddha statues or meditation décor. It was a bridge:
It was commerce as ritual. Exchange as gratitude. Beauty with intention.
For the first time in years, I felt something I'd forgotten: alignment.
I acquired Artisan d'Asie and started from scratch.
#9EDBDA) and gold (#D0A277) palette, photography that honored the handmadeThe early months were solitary. I financed everything personally. Solved technical puzzles and cultural ones. Balanced spreadsheets with soul.
But every day, the work felt less like labor and more like meditation.
Not because I'd discovered some growth hack. But because I'd finally stopped trying to be someone I wasn't.
People ask me: "What changed? Why does this business work when others felt impossible?"
The answer is simple, but not easy:
I stopped treating commerce as conquest and started treating it as connection.
1. Authenticity is commercial.
Every product carries a real story. Our handcrafted mala beads aren't mass-produced — they're knotted by artisans who learned the tradition from their teachers. People can feel when something is real.
2. Slowness is strategic.
Craft takes time. A Siamese rosewood box takes weeks to carve and polish. We don't apologize for that — we celebrate it. Trust takes time. Meaning takes time.
3. Empathy is efficient.
When you understand what people truly need — not just what they search for — you don't have to shout. Our customers aren't looking for cheap Buddha statues. They're seeking spiritual décor that holds intention.
4. Beauty is a business model.
Not aesthetics for their own sake, but beauty as respect — for the maker, the material, the recipient.
These aren't platitudes. They're operational principles.
And they work.
If you're wondering how to buy with meaning instead of impulse, here's what I've learned:
1. Who made this?
Can you trace the object back to human hands? We know every artisan partner by name — and you should too.
2. What tradition does it honor?
Our authentic incense for meditation isn't just scented smoke. It's made using recipes passed down through Tibetan monasteries for centuries.
3. What story does it carry?
A handmade jewelry box isn't just storage. It's a piece of disappearing craftsmanship. When you buy it, you're preserving a tradition.
4. Does it create calm or clutter?
Mindful living isn't about owning more. It's about owning things that matter.
At Artisan d'Asie, we don't just sell spiritual home décor or meditation tools. We curate objects that bridge worlds.
This is why our Buddha statues aren't mass-market replicas. This is why our mala bracelets feel different in your hand. This is why people return — not because we sold them something, but because we helped them find something that mattered.
After nearly a third of my life in Asia, most other places feel foreign now.
I stayed because:
This isn't exile. This is alignment.
And from this ground, Artisan d'Asie grows — not as a Western company importing "exotic" goods, but as a bridge built with respect, humility, and decades of cultural fluency.
If you're reading this, you're likely navigating your own journey — questioning old models, searching for work that feels meaningful, wondering if purpose and profit can coexist.
Let me offer you what I've learned:
It won't be easy. But it will be honest.
And honesty, I've discovered, is the most scalable thing you can build.
We're entering a new phase:
But no matter how we grow, the foundation remains:
Commerce as calm. Growth as gratitude. Every object a bridge between worlds.
Browse our collection of handcrafted malas, authentic Asian incense, spiritual home décor, and artisan jewelry boxes. Every purchase supports makers and preserves traditions.
We're raising a mindful growth round to scale without dilution. If you believe commerce can be both profitable and purposeful, let's talk.
We're always seeking collaborators who honor craft, sustainability, and story.
This is the work I was meant to do. Not because it was easy to find. But because I finally stopped running from it.
If you've ever felt the pull toward something more meaningful — even when it doesn't make sense on paper — I see you.
Trust that pull. Follow it with patience. Build with intention.
The world needs what you're becoming.
We bridge ancient Asian craftsmanship with modern mindful living — curating handcrafted spiritual pieces that transform commerce into ritual.
Every mala bead, every incense stick, every carved box carries a story. Every purchase supports artisans preserving endangered crafts. Every interaction honors the sacred exchange between maker and recipient.
This is commerce with meaning. This is where tradition meets transformation.
Welcome home. 🪷
Jonathan Mather
Managing Director
Artisan d'Asie
artisandasie.com | LinkedIn
What makes Artisan d'Asie different from other spiritual décor stores?
We work directly with artisans, not wholesalers. Every piece is authentic, handcrafted, and carries a traceable story. We're not reselling mass-market Buddha statues — we're preserving endangered crafts.
How do I choose the right mala for my meditation practice?
Consider your intention. Different materials (sandalwood, rudraksha, lotus seed) carry different energies. We provide detailed guidance with every product, including traditional meanings and uses.
Are your products ethically sourced?
Yes. We prioritize sustainable materials, fair compensation for artisans, and transparent supply chains. Every partnership is built on respect and long-term collaboration.
Do you ship internationally?
Yes. We ship worldwide with sustainable packaging. Shipping times vary by region — typically 7–14 days for most destinations.
Can I visit the artisans who make these pieces?
While we don't currently offer tours, we share artisan stories, photos, and videos regularly. Our goal is to make the connection between maker and recipient as transparent as possible.
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