Wall decor is a broad category here — broader than wall art proper. It includes objects that hang on walls but aren’t framed art: mirrors, clocks, metal sculptures, repurposed objects given new context by their placement.
The reclaimed window mirror, for example, is technically wall decor and technically a mirror — an old window frame with mirror glass set where the panes were. The vintage tractor grill mounted as wall art is industrial sculpture. The wooden wheel hub on a stand is decor for a surface, but it’s also a wall-adjacent object that anchors a corner.
This category is where the sourcing philosophy shows most clearly. Tony buys pieces that he finds interesting — things with a history that’s visible on the surface. The distressed paint on a repurposed object isn’t a finish applied to simulate age. It’s actual age.
Inventory here changes with every container. Things that are genuinely one-of-a-kind sell once and don’t come back. If you see something in this section that speaks to you, the decision timeline is shorter than it is for a sofa.