We work at the intersection of plants and design. Not as opposites, but collaborators.

Plants are living objects. They occupy space, hold form, change slowly, and respond to intention. Design, at its best, does the same. We don’t believe one has to be sacrificed for the other.

This work comes from genuine fascination and long-term engagement—watching how plants grow, how they settle into a space, and how small, thoughtful decisions compound over time. We care deeply about structure and proportion, but just as much about patience, observation, and learning when to step back.

There is a human hand behind everything here. Not to dominate or decorate, but to guide where it makes sense and leave room where it doesn’t. Some plants are shaped and trained. Others are left to do what they already do well. The distinction isn’t rigid—it’s responsive.

We source for form and character, not mass production.

What draws us to this work is the balance between intention and letting things unfold. We’re interested in forms that last, impressions that settle in, and work that continues to feel right as it evolves.

Close-up of a potted plant with a label that reads 'sculptree', featuring a thick trunk and green leaves, surrounded by small multicolored pebbles.