Signature Marble Furniture
We work directly with Rajasthan’s quarries to bring solid stone into your living room. Our marble furniture is not about high-gloss perfection; it is about the weight, the raw texture, and the stories carved by our karigars.
A detailed look at the Dori Patti chair, highlighting the contrast between the smooth, checkered seat and the intricately carved back panel. Each detail is a nod to traditional Indian craft, restored for the modern home.
From the truck to the artisan's hands, this video shows the journey of our Dori Patti chair. You can see the meticulous process of carving, sanding, and assembling each marble component, a true labor of love and skill.
The Dori Patti chair, seen here from a different angle, reveals the twisted black marble pillar contrasting with the carved white marble. This piece is a dialogue between different materials, textures, and forms.
An overhead view of the Dori Patti chair on a raw block of marble. This perspective shows the piece as a functional sculpture, a piece of art born from the earth.
A sneak peek into the creation of the Dori Patti chair. We work on-site with our team of artisans, ensuring every detail, from the raw marble selection to the final polish, meets our vision.
This is a tribute to the karigars. Their skill and dedication are what make a challenging material like marble sing. Here, you see the final assembly and inspection of the Dori Patti chair, a milestone for PB Home.
A quiet moment of reflection at the marble yard in Rajasthan. Surrounded by the raw material, we find inspiration and sketch out ideas, connecting with the source of our craft before the first cut is ever made.
About Signature Marble Furniture
These pieces are not for everyone. They are solid, heavy, and intentional. Each chair or table weighs between 60kg and 100kg, carved from single blocks of green or Banswara white marble. It is a slow, manual process that requires our karigars to work directly in the Rajasthan quarries, not on a factory floor. If you want a conversation piece that feels grounded and lasts for generations, this is where we start.
When we started designing these pieces, the goal was never just to build furniture. We wanted to see how far we could push solid stone while keeping the warmth of a home.
The Dori Patti Process
Take the Dori Patti chair, for instance. It is a dialogue between different textures. We take a raw block of marble and work it until it captures the intricate patterns of gota-patti craft. It takes over 300 hours of manual carving. This is not about efficiency; it is about the connection between the artisan’s hand and the material.
Why Solid Stone
We prefer working with green Indian marble, Banswara white, and black basalt. These are not polished to a blinding shine. We use honed or matte finishes because we want you to feel the grain. We seal them professionally to handle daily use, but they still carry the soul of the stone.
A Transitional Approach
My work sits in that middle ground—what I call transitional. It is neither purely traditional nor clinically modern. It blends the Shatranj table’s geometry with the organic feel of hand-carved stone. If you look at our pieces, you will see minor variations in tone and grain. That is not a flaw; it is the evidence that your piece came from the earth, not an assembly line.
Purple Backyard
I am Kumpal. I started Purple Backyard because I wanted homes to feel like a warm hug, not a showroom. My studio is where we turn raw marble into pieces that hold a story, mixing traditional Indian craft with the way we live today.
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