
Cut and shaped by hand in Brooklyn, this small rhombus shelf reads as both object and architecture — a diamond of warm hardwood floating against the wall. The angled silhouette draws the eye while the shelf surface stays practical: deep enough for a small succulent, a taper, or a found stone. Available in mahogany, oak, and paint-ready poplar, each piece shows its own grain pattern, its own depth of tone. The wood will darken and settle with time, growing richer the longer it holds its place.
Because each shelf is cut individually, grain patterns, surface character, and tone will vary slightly — no two pieces are the same.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Cut and shaped by hand in Brooklyn, this small rhombus shelf reads as both object and architecture — a diamond of warm hardwood floating against the wall. The angled silhouette draws the eye while the shelf surface stays practical: deep enough for a small succulent, a taper, or a found stone. Available in mahogany, oak, and paint-ready poplar, each piece shows its own grain pattern, its own depth of tone. The wood will darken and settle with time, growing richer the longer it holds its place.
Because each shelf is cut individually, grain patterns, surface character, and tone will vary slightly — no two pieces are the same.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
A geometric perch for the one small thing
You hang it in the hallway — nothing more than a small hardwood diamond against white paint — and somehow it becomes the first thing anyone notices. The succulent on top helps, but the shelf earns its share of the attention.



