Osram Ne Nsoromma depicts the moon and a star together — a symbol drawn from the Akan proverb that describes the relationship between a woman and the man who loves her faithfully. The star, it is said, has no light of its own, but shines close to the moon and is made more beautiful by their proximity. Together, they navigate the dark. The symbol was stamped onto cloth at weddings and given as gifts between those bound by love and devotion.
The Akan teaching behind this symbol is that love, at its most enduring, is a form of navigation — two people who orient themselves toward each other and, in doing so, find their way through darkness together. It is not a symbol of dependence, but of chosen closeness: the understanding that faithfulness creates a kind of light that neither person could generate alone.
Osram Ne Nsoromma is worn as an affirmation of love and loyalty — romantic, familial, or deeply friendly. It honours the relationships that have endured, the people who have stayed, the bonds that have been tested and have held. To wear it is to name someone — or something — that has been a constant in your life, and to carry that constancy with you as a kind of compass.









