Nytrus Reserve Just Put a Meteorite in Your Whiskey Glass

Before we talk about the glass itself, let’s take a moment to appreciate the audacity of the idea. Someone looked at a 4.6-billion-year-old space rock, pulled from the ground in northern Argentina, and thought: what if we put it inside a whiskey tumbler? The result is the Nytrus Reserve Meteorite Tumbler, and I have to say, it’s one of the more genuinely fascinating objects I’ve come across this year.

The Campo del Cielo meteorite has a story worth knowing. It broke apart over northern Argentina around 2500 BCE, scattering across a region now called Chaco. The name itself translates to “Field of Sky,” which feels almost too poetic for something so ancient. It was first mined in 1926, and fragments have since traveled everywhere from museum display cases to private collections. Now, a piece of it lives at the bottom of a crystal tumbler, and I think that’s a fitting next chapter.

Designer: Nytrus Reserve

Each Nytrus tumbler is 8.5 oz and hand-blown from high-clarity glass, with the meteorite fragment suspended in the thick base. The design stays clean and minimal so the eye goes straight to the artifact. You can see it from every angle: the rough-edged, ancient rock sitting there like a period at the end of a very long sentence. No two fragments are identical, which means no two tumblers are exactly the same. A Coin of Authenticity sits beneath the fragment as a finishing detail, and it’s the kind of small gesture that signals a brand takes provenance seriously rather than just treating it as a selling point.

The tumbler is available in two finishes: Antique Tin and Amber Gold. Both are understated enough to work across different aesthetics, which matters more than people admit. A beautifully made object still has to fit where you live. The Amber Gold leans warmer, the Antique Tin more cool and contemporary. I’d probably go Antique Tin just for the visual contrast against the darker meteorite fragment, but that’s entirely personal preference.

Nytrus has been releasing these in limited series, each capped at 300 editions. They’re currently on Series IV, and previous series have sold out. That doesn’t surprise me at all. For a product sitting so specifically at the intersection of science, craft, and ritual, that kind of traction makes sense. It’s not trying to be for everyone, and the people it’s for seem to know it immediately.

The weight and presence of the glass is something that comes up again and again in reviews. It feels solid in the hand, which matters when you’re drinking something worth savoring slowly. Luxury drinkware often gets the look right and then fails on feel, so it’s reassuring that the craftsmanship follows through on what the concept promises. Over 1,200 collectors have bought in, with the tumbler holding a 4.9-star rating, which for a product this specific is pretty telling.

I’ll be honest about something. Products pitched as “conversation starters” can sometimes feel like a lazy shortcut for things that don’t have much else going on. But the conversation a meteorite tumbler actually starts is a good one. How did this thing get here? What was happening on Earth when this rock was falling through space? When you can trace a drinking glass back to a fragment that traveled 204 million miles from the asteroid belt, that’s not a gimmick. That’s just a legitimately extraordinary object.

Whether or not you drink whiskey, the Nytrus Reserve Meteorite Tumbler earns its place in a rare category of design objects that justify their asking price through real rarity and genuine craft. The fragment is authentically ancient. The glass is authentically handmade. The scarcity is real. That combination doesn’t come together very often, and when it does, it’s worth paying attention. If you want to feel a little more connected to the universe the next time you sit down with a drink, this is a pretty direct route.