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Three Generations. One Standard.

The Legacy of Service

The House of ZEMRIA stands in quiet honor of a direct three-generation legacy of military service.

This tradition of duty began with Delmar Maier, whose service in the United States Air Force reflected discipline, steadiness, and sacrifice. It was carried forward by brother Alan, who retired as a Chief in the Nebraska Air National Guard, leading with the same strength of character and commitment to something greater than self.

Today, that standard continues through son Jacob, who entered the Air Force at seventeen, directly after high school. Now serving as an E4, his path reflects the same devotion to duty, responsibility, and honor that shaped the generations before him.

Service, like legacy, is not spoken loudly. It is lived.

It is found in discipline. In sacrifice. In showing up when it matters. In carrying a name with honor and leaving it stronger for those who follow.

For this House, military service is not simply part of the family story.

It is part of the standard.

Objects of Discipline

These are the pieces chosen not for display alone, but for what they represent.

Precision timepieces that honor responsibility. Writing instruments that preserve thought and command. Leather goods shaped by use and years. Humidors that mark earned moments of reflection. Vaults that protect what matters. Jewelry carried as heirloom, not ornament. Furnishings built for legacy, not trend.

Each object belongs to a life lived with intention.

Featured Categories

Horology
Time measured in generations.

Writing Instruments
Legacy preserved in ink.

Leather Goods
Built for the road, refined for the years.

Humidors
Ritual. Reflection. Quiet reward.

Vaults
Protection is its own form of stewardship.

Jewelry
Heirloom pieces carried with meaning.

Heritage Furniture
The rooms where legacy is lived.

The Standard Continues

Legacy is not protected by words.

It is protected by discipline.

It is carried in how a man serves, how he leads, how he protects, and what he leaves behind.

Three generations have carried that standard forward.

This House intends to do the same.