Curated home goods — Green Valley, Arizona
Heirlooms for the slow-built home a small house of vessels, woven things, & quiet textiles
Megaselect is a curation house. We work with potters, weavers, and small workrooms across the desert West to bring forward objects that age into a home rather than out of it.
The objects we carry have weight, grain, and a maker's mark. We buy small, ship slow, and trade in pieces that earn a place at the table.
Megaselect began in a converted cinder-block studio in Green Valley, an hour south of Tucson. The mission has been the same since the first edit: source quietly, write honest copy, never carry a piece we would not place in our own home.
Each season we release a tight assortment — usually fewer than thirty pieces — with full provenance and a written field note for each maker. Pieces age. Stains and patina belong on a working object. We restock when we can; archive editions are gone when the last one ships.
We do not chase trend, and we do not overprint. The studio is a working room first and a storefront second. If you are reading this from a project deck or buyer office, we would rather speak with you than sell to you.
Spring 2026 Edit
Five collections, one season
A working assortment for the kitchen, the table, the floor, and the wall. Each collection is a closed edition; once a piece is gone, the entry remains as a record.
Vessels & Vases
Hand-thrown stoneware and porcelain made in small batches. Glazes are mixed in studio; no two pieces match exactly.
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Table & Service
Plates, bowls, and serving pieces meant for daily wear. Lead-free glazes; dishwasher steady.
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Textiles
Throws, runners, and small floor pieces from cooperative looms in northern New Mexico and the Navajo Nation.
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Soft Linens
Heavyweight European flax washed for the long weekend. Naturally undyed, bleached, or stone.
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Wood & Vessel Turning
Salvaged mesquite, walnut, and reclaimed barn-pine, finished only with food-safe oil.
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Field notes
Stories from the workrooms
We file a short piece each month from a maker's bench, dye room, or kiln. No brand voice, no marketing layer — just a working note.
“A house full of finished things is a house that is finished with you. Build it slowly — one bowl, one cloth, one rug at a time.” From the studio, Spring 2026