The Light Edit
In India, light has never been merely functional. It is ceremonial, atmospheric, alive.
From the brass diyas lit at dusk in temple courtyards to the intricately pierced lanterns of Rajasthan that cast geometric shadows across stone walls — the relationship between Indian craft and illumination runs centuries deep. Light was the first luxury. The first transformation of a space from ordinary to sacred.
The pieces in this edit carry that lineage forward. Lampshades woven from banana paper — a material that filters light into warmth rather than brightness. Shades cut from lantana vine harvested from the hills of rural India, each one irregular, each one impossible to replicate exactly. Leather forms referencing the ancient art of shadow puppetry, their silhouettes as considered as sculpture.
These are not lights that illuminate a room. They are objects that define it — chosen for how they look unlit as much as lit, for the quality of shadow they cast, for the conversation they start.
Each piece is made to order. Enquire to begin.