Some of the most useful pieces in a room are the ones that resist easy categorization. They’re not quite accessories, not quite furniture — they’re material objects that add texture and specificity to a space.
You’ll find stone terrazzo container vases where the aggregate pattern in each piece is unique to the casting pour. Crackled glass epoxy disks on metal stands where the fractured glass is suspended in clear resin — an object that functions as both accent piece and conversation item. Codd-neck vintage soda bottles displayed in wooden crates, where the bottle itself is the point. Carved wooden salad bowls in guanacaste from Costa Rica.
Material combinations work here in ways they don’t in more strictly categorized product lines. Stone and metal, wood and glass, ceramic and iron — these combinations reflect workshop traditions where one material naturally leads to another in the production process.
These pieces fill the spaces between furniture — the shelf gap, the console surface, the coffee table tray. Come in to see the current selection.