Tony doesn’t buy sofas from showroom catalogs. He finds them. In India, he works with workshops that have been cutting and stitching leather for three generations — families where the craft moves from father to son, not from factory floor to factory floor. That means the sofas here don’t arrive in bulk runs of fifty identical pieces. They arrive as individuals.
You’ll find leather sofas with hand-applied patina that deepens over years of use. Upholstered pieces with reclaimed wood frames. Loveseats stitched in fabrics sourced from textile regions in Hungary and Egypt. Tufted, ribbed, clean-lined — the styles vary because the sourcing is genuinely varied.
What you won’t find is assembly-line uniformity. Dimensions shift slightly piece to piece the way handmade things do. Stitching patterns are intentional, not printed. The leather on a camel-colored piece may have a different grain than the brown version sitting next to it.
Inventory turns. A container lands, the floor fills, things sell. Come in to see what’s currently on the floor.