MEMOIR

MEMOIR

MEMOIR

MEMOIR

/To Be, in Stillness

/essence oF reflection

/To Be, in Stillness

In Zen, Aru (在る) means “to be.” Still and grounded, the basin reflects this quiet state of presence. It turns a daily ritual into something more - a pause to breathe, to notice water tracing
its path through stone and memory.


Each Aru is carved by hand from a single block of teakwood sandstone, its form both sculptural and meditative. Along its fine drain rest reclaimed glass kanchas, once buried in the soil of Aurofarm -
echoes of childhood now embedded in timeworn stone.


Made in an edition of three, each Aru carries its own tone, weight, and story - inviting you to simply be.

In Zen, Aru (在る) means “to be.” Still and grounded, the basin reflects this quiet state of presence. It turns a daily ritual into something more - a pause to breathe, to notice water tracing
its path through stone and memory.


Each Aru is carved by hand from a single block of teakwood sandstone, its form both sculptural and meditative. Along its fine drain rest reclaimed glass kanchas, once buried in the soil of Aurofarm -
echoes of childhood now embedded in timeworn stone.


Made in an edition of three, each Aru carries its own tone, weight, and story - inviting you to simply be.

In Zen, Aru (在る) means “to be.” Still and grounded, the basin reflects this quiet state of presence. It turns a daily ritual into something more - a pause to breathe, to notice water tracing
its path through stone and memory.


Each Aru is carved by hand from a single block of teakwood sandstone, its form both sculptural and meditative. Along its fine drain rest reclaimed glass kanchas, once buried in the soil of Aurofarm -
echoes of childhood now embedded in timeworn stone.


Made in an edition of three, each Aru carries its own tone, weight, and story - inviting you to simply be.

In Zen, Aru (在る) means “to be.” Still and grounded, the basin reflects this quiet state of presence. It turns a daily ritual into something more - a pause to breathe, to notice water tracing
its path through stone and memory.


Each Aru is carved by hand from a single block of teakwood sandstone, its form both sculptural and meditative. Along its fine drain rest reclaimed glass kanchas, once buried in the soil of Aurofarm -
echoes of childhood now embedded in timeworn stone.


Made in an edition of three, each Aru carries its own tone, weight, and story - inviting you to simply be.

In Zen, Aru (在る) means “to be.” Still and grounded, the basin reflects this quiet state of presence. It turns a daily ritual into something more - a pause to breathe, to notice water tracing
its path through stone and memory.


Each Aru is carved by hand from a single block of teakwood sandstone, its form both sculptural and meditative. Along its fine drain rest reclaimed glass kanchas, once buried in the soil of Aurofarm -
echoes of childhood now embedded in timeworn stone.


Made in an edition of three, each Aru carries its own tone, weight, and story - inviting you to simply be.