12/03/2026
Rozana Pani Stand: by Amjad Bashir
The water corner exists in every home. It’s practical. It’s necessary. And most of the time, it feels accidental.
I wanted to give it a shape that feels intentional. A stand that holds water steadily, keeps cups within reach, and makes that daily act feel calmer.
Because some parts of a home are not decoration. They are care.
The Pani Stand
Price: PKR 60,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
12/03/2026
Rozana Ghari Wall Shelf: by Amjad Bashir
Every house has a few small routines that keep it together. Not the big rituals, the small ones. A place where keys land. Where a wallet waits. Where you pause for a second before leaving.
I made the Ghari Wall Shelf as a home base. Time at the center, and small ledges around it for daily life.

It isn’t meant to display. It’s meant to catch what you carry, and send you back out lighter.
The Ghari Wall Shelf
Price: PKR 150,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
11/03/2026
Rozana Mehmaan Stack Stools: by Amjad Bashir
Guests arrive without warning. And suddenly the room needs to make space. I’ve always noticed how Pakistani homes respond to that moment.

A chair is pulled from somewhere. A stool appears from a corner. Seating shows up quietly, without ceremony.
I made the Mehmaan Stack Stools for that exact rhythm. They store as one clean column, and separate easily when you need them.

They don’t try to become the room. They just help the room hold people.
The Mehmaan Stack Stools
Price: PKR 40,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
11/03/2026
Rozana Jali Light Cabinet: by Amjad Bashir
Storage is never only storage in a desi household and here’s another one of my takes!
I grew up around jali doors and screens that let air pass through. They kept things from feeling sealed away. They let a room breathe.
I made the Jali Light Cabinet with that same idea. Ventilation as a quiet kind of care. For shoes, linens, pantry things, whatever needs a place, but not a heavy one.
The Jali Light Cabinet.
Price: PKR 110,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
24/02/2026
Ghoom Sandook: by Amjad Bashir
Every house had a sandook. It held blankets, clothes, old things you didn’t touch often but never threw away.
It was heavy. It stayed in one place. People sat on it without thinking. I kept that weight, but changed the way it lives in a room. The Ghoom Sandook rotates so access doesn’t mean effort.

It’s still a sandook, grounded, quiet, familiar, just willing to move with you.
The Ghoom Sandook: Rotating Trunk Bench.

Price: PKR 100,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
24/02/2026
Ghoom Rak: by Amjad Bashir
Shoes were never arranged in a line. They piled up near the door. Someone sat down to untie laces. Someone else leaned to the side to make space.
Shoes off, weight shifting, body settling.
I made the Ghoom Rak because the entryway is not a storage zone. It’s a pause. You can sit on it. You can turn it to find your shoes.

The Ghoom Rak: Shoe Bench for the Entryway.

Price: PKR 100,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
24/02/2026
Ghoom Cart: by Amjad Bashir
Chai was never served in one direction. Cups came from the kitchen, moved through the house, stopped wherever people sat: on beds, floors, verandas.
Someone always carried the tray slightly off balance. Someone always asked for one more cup.
I made the Ghoom Cart because serving was never linear. The cart turns so everything stays within reach, cups, kettle, snacks, without asking anyone to get up.
The Ghoom Cart: Chai and Serving Trolley.

Price: PKR 60,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
17/02/2026
Ghoom Stand: by Amjad Bashir
Rain was never planned. Someone would shout from inside, someone else would run to grab an umbrella, a dupatta would end up drying somewhere it didn’t belong.
Things were always hung, moved, shifted and they were never stored neatly. That chaos felt normal. I made the Ghoom Stand because umbrellas and dupattas don’t need a strict place.

The stand rotates so you don’t have to pull or search. You just turn it, take what you need, and move on.
The Ghoom Stand: Umbrella & Dupatta Stand

Price: PKR 125,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
17/02/2026
Ghoom Shelf: by Amjad Bashir
I grew up moving around the house without ever thinking about it. Books travelled. Cups moved. Someone would sit on the floor, then get up and carry the same things somewhere else.
As kids, ghoomna was always part of the day, cycling under light rain, running around the house during load-shedding, spinning until someone told you to stop. Movement was never separate from living.
I made the Ghoom Shelf because I wanted storage that didn’t feel fixed. It turns quietly. It doesn’t announce itself. It just follows how you already move.
The Ghoom Shelf.

Price: PKR 75,000

For details, finishes, or orders, please DM us.
12/02/2026
Carvequiet Mirror: by Amjad Bashir
I’ve never liked mirrors that demand attention. Growing up, mirrors were practical things, something you passed on your way out, something that caught light before it caught you.
The Carvequiet Mirror came from that memory. The frame stays thick and grounded. The carved recess doesn’t interrupt the reflection: it sits beside it, holding shadow.
The Carvequiet Mirror.

Price: PKR 145,000

For details, wood finishes, or orders, please DM us.
12/02/2026
Carvequiet Side Tables: by Amjad Bashir
In my family, things placed beside you were never identical. One person kept everything tucked away. Another left things open, half-visible, easy to reach.
I made these side tables as a pair because that’s how they exist in real rooms. Different ways of holding what’s close. One keeps things hidden. The other leaves a small opening, not for display, just for access.
They weren’t designed to match. They were designed to coexist.
The Carvequiet Side Tables (Set of Two).

Price: PKR 80,000

For details, wood finishes, or orders, please DM us.
12/02/2026
Carvequiet Bed: by Amjad Bashir
I grew up in rooms where furniture stayed longer than people.
The bed wasn’t something you styled; it was something you returned to. Heavy, familiar, unchanged even as everything else shifted around it.
I made the Carvequiet Bed thinking about that weight. Not the weight of sleep, but the weight of being held in place. The carved recess came from noticing how light settles into worn surfaces over time: how absence can feel just as grounding as presence.
The Carvequiet Bed.

Price: PKR 200,000

For details, wood finishes, or orders, please DM us.