Prioritising natural materials and organic textures, we work to restore and repurpose furniture, art, architectural salvage, and decorative items for both beauty and practical use.
We don’t just paint furniture and flip it. We work to restore, update, and enable pieces to tell their stories through their beauty and practicality.
Much of what we have to offer would have ended up in landfill or were otherwise outdated, unloved, or unwanted. We take those pieces and work to make them desirable once again.
Based in Dorset, England we offer sales of pieces with collection, local delivery or shipping via courier to other parts of the United Kingdom and we also take selected commissions within our expertise for those loved pieces that need a new lease of life.
These Hungarian terracotta or earthenware jugs are just fantastic - beautiful, rustic, and so strking in their simplicity. I bought a collection of them from auction, which you can see in the final photo, and each are unique in size and shape.
This particular jug is 23cm high and approximately 15-16cm wide including the handle. It is hand-thrown terracotta with handpainted white or slip bands along the neck. It is completely intact with no cracks, but obviously does have age-related marks.
This lovely brown glass bottle is a leftover from a chemist's cabinet, dating late 19th or early 20th century. The glass is thick and the stopper is also solid glass (i.e. no cork).
The label is in German, hailing from Merck chemical and pharmaceutical industries in Darmstadt, Germany. The solution it contained at one time was a buffer solution that helped to stabilise pH levels when other acids or bases were added to a liquid, and it is safe. The label has the original production number on it.
Ideal for antique bottle collectors, those with an interest in antique apothecary and chemist paraphenalia, or just those who would like a bit of history on their shelf.
We have so much love for this Victorian armchair! Its grey leather is not original as the chair has been recovered - and as a result, the seat is in excellent condition and the chair is sturdy and very comfortable! With metal rollers on the legs, it makes it easy to move the chair around to chase the sun or hoover underneath.
Everyone who sits in this chair loves it and we will be very sad to see it go, so we need to make sure it goes to a loving home who will enjoy it as much as we do.
Dimensions:
85cm deep x 67cm wide at its widest point x 98cm high (seat height is 40cm)
This handmade pottery charger was made by Angela Stead (British 1928-2018). Featuring sgraffiito decoration it is a beautiful scene of dairy cows in a Cornish farm landscape.
The charger is hefty in weight, and is signed with Stead’s initials verso.
This is a strikingly fabulous and beautiful piece - a fantastic piece to have on a shelf for decoration or on a table as a fruitbowl. Either way, every time you see it, it will maek you smile.
The charger itself is 39cm in diameter.
These light shades are striking in both their shape, style and simplicity. I love the industrial look of these whilst at the same time having this organic shape reminiscent of a beehive which makes them more tactile, softer, and rounder than you often get in industrial lighting.
These are zinc or aluminum in a bare silver colour, with no paint or additional finish to them. The material seems to resist rusting given I would date these to mid-20th century. Two of the three have a larger hole for the pendant lighting to sit, but these can be easily adapted with bulb fitting adapters to suit your own size required.
The price is individual. If you would like to purchase all 3 at the same time, please email me and I can give a discount for buying the three together.
This is classic French enamelware and has certainly lived a life, but has so much more to give.
This pail has two knob handles, a lid, and is decorated with a white and blue swirl enamel pattern. It has various chips in the enamel and some rust on the inside, so it should not be used for food storage or serving. However, bread kept in a bag or other non-food items could certainly be stored or placed inside.
This pail is in decebt condition and is watertight.
It is a good size (wine bottle used for size comparison; this one is the largest of the 3 in the photo) and would complement anyone's home or shop!

