
Cut from oak or mahogany wood-grain stock and shaped into a clean triangular form, this floating propagation shelf holds glass test tubes vertically through drilled openings — cuttings suspended below, foliage spilling above. The wood carries its grain openly, and the clear glass makes root development visible from across the room — part process, part display, entirely considered. Three base-width options allow it to hold anywhere from two to four cuttings at once.
Each shelf is cut and finished in small batches; natural variation in grain tone and texture means no two pieces read quite the same on the wall.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Cut from oak or mahogany wood-grain stock and shaped into a clean triangular form, this floating propagation shelf holds glass test tubes vertically through drilled openings — cuttings suspended below, foliage spilling above. The wood carries its grain openly, and the clear glass makes root development visible from across the room — part process, part display, entirely considered. Three base-width options allow it to hold anywhere from two to four cuttings at once.
Each shelf is cut and finished in small batches; natural variation in grain tone and texture means no two pieces read quite the same on the wall.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
Your cuttings, hanging right where you can see them
A single tradescantia cutting dropped into the glass tube this morning — by next week, pale roots will press against the sides. The shelf holds it all at eye level, doing quiet, unhurried work on an otherwise bare wall.



