Accessories are where a room gets finished. The tray on the coffee table. The vase at the end of the console. The cutting board on the kitchen counter that’s too beautiful to put in a drawer. These aren’t afterthoughts — they’re the details that make the larger pieces read correctly.
The accessories here come from the same sourcing trips as the furniture. Guanacaste wood cutting boards and salad bowls from Costa Rica, where the guanacaste tree produces a grain pattern that looks like topographic maps. Carved wooden candle holders from Indian workshops. Stone terrazzo container vases. Live-edge wooden trays with natural bark still on the edge sides. Metal planters with handle hardware from workshops Tony visits in India.
Some pieces — the Denver-painted wooden mugs, the shot glasses — are regional souvenirs with craft behind them. Others are purely functional objects elevated by the material they’re made from.
Accessories are also the lowest-commitment way to bring a Rare Finds piece into a space and see how it works with what you have. Come in and see what’s on the floor.