
Turned from solid mango wood and finished in a warm amber tone, this console table earns its presence through form alone. The two cylindrical column legs are wrapped in hand-carved ring detailing — each groove deliberate, each ring slightly its own — rising from broad circular bases to meet a gently rounded tabletop. Slim enough for a hallway, substantial enough for a living room wall, it holds a vase, a stack of books, or nothing at all with equal composure.
As mango wood is a naturally varied material, each piece carries its own grain pattern and subtle tonal shifts — no two consoles will read exactly the same.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Turned from solid mango wood and finished in a warm amber tone, this console table earns its presence through form alone. The two cylindrical column legs are wrapped in hand-carved ring detailing — each groove deliberate, each ring slightly its own — rising from broad circular bases to meet a gently rounded tabletop. Slim enough for a hallway, substantial enough for a living room wall, it holds a vase, a stack of books, or nothing at all with equal composure.
As mango wood is a naturally varied material, each piece carries its own grain pattern and subtle tonal shifts — no two consoles will read exactly the same.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The table that stops you in the hallway
You set a vase down and step back, and the columns hold the eye longer than expected — the stacked rings catching the afternoon light, the wood warm and settled against a pale wall. It does the work of decoration just by standing there.



