The design starts with your room layout, your theme, and your guest needs. It is not copied or reused. Every table, cabinet, or mirror is shaped to match your brand, lighting, and hotel function.
This furniture includes special materials like mango wood, bone inlay, or painted panels. It is not mass produced. Each piece is built from scratch and finished by hand for long life and daily use.
It improves how rooms feel and how guests remember the space. It also helps hotels create a visual story guests can connect with.
You choose the surface finish. That includes stained wood, matte paint, glossy polish, or brushed texture. Each surface is sealed for hotel use.
For motifs, you can select from bone inlay, painted art, or engraved carvings. We align those with your brand, your culture, or your theme.
Every design is created from a blank base. It is made to match your light, your wall tone, and your space flow. All changes are applied before production. You see the drawing before the work begins.
Wood furniture can be sealed in matte, satin, or gloss. We use stains, oils, or water-based polish depending on the tone you want.
Painted units may include layered hand-painting, smooth enamel, or rustic textures. These get a clear topcoat to stop scratches or water marks.
Inlay work is finished with resin, then buffed until smooth. For bone, mother of pearl, or metal, the final polish adds shine and keeps dust away.
Every finish is tested before packing. It must handle wear, heat, sunlight, cleaning liquids, and climate shifts.
Lobby units are made to hold visual weight. They include console tables, mirrors, display panels, and lounge chairs. These pieces are designed to impress first-time visitors and support continuous guest movement.
Spa furniture is crafted in soft tones with smooth finishes. Mango wood, mother of pearl, and matte paint are common. These units handle low light, soft textures, and moisture without damage.
Outdoor areas get protective layering. We use treated wood and sealed inlays. Each surface is made for sun, water, and rough use. This includes benches, tables, and planters.
Every zone demands a different form. We match furniture type, finish, and size to the mood of that space.
Our team creates a 3D visual model based on your brief. You can rotate it, change the angle, and check the finish. This helps you see scale, color, and shape in the exact space you plan to use.
Moodboards include material swatches, motif ideas, layout plans, and color options. You get a clear set of visuals to decide what works best for each room type.
We use real hotel conditions to map the light, wall tones, and layout. Each board is shaped to your brand mood, not just furniture style.
Final 3D models also help with approval and export documentation. It saves time and avoids back-and-forth later.
Each custom item goes through setup, pattern drafting, and finishing. This process works best when repeated across multiple units. It keeps the craft flow smooth and the cost stable.
Smaller requests can be accepted for pilot projects, model rooms, or catalog previews. For full property setups, the MOQ is applied to each product category like coffee tables, headboards, or consoles.
Packaging, shipping, and finish control also rely on minimum quantity runs. It helps us keep consistency in polish, color tone, and batch delivery.
Let us know your rollout plan. MOQ can be adjusted based on location, delivery phase, and the number of room types.
Mango wood is our base for most structural pieces. It is stable, has a rich texture, and holds polish well. For painted surfaces, we use seasoned mango or rosewood with layered hand finish.
Bone inlay and mother of pearl are used for accents and surface design. These are hand-cut, shaped, and fixed using traditional tools. The base is sealed to stop moisture or wear.
White metal is used on panels or edges. It is embossed, burnished, and mounted with a strong grip. It gives a metallic shine with antique depth.
Painted furniture uses heritage pigment mixes with matte or gloss finish. The final topcoat makes it suitable for hotel cleaning routines.
All materials pass moisture tests, heat tolerance, and durability checks before dispatch.
Wood is sourced from legal mills with felling clearance. We use mango wood from trees that stop fruiting. This avoids forest loss and supports reuse. In some cases, we also reclaim old wood with structural strength.
Bone and mother of pearl come from ethical suppliers. No animals are harmed. We use leftover pieces from natural loss, then cut and clean each part with care.
Paints and sealants are low-VOC. We check every finish to match indoor air safety norms for hotel spaces.
Our workshop recycles scraps, manages dust output, and keeps waste close to zero. Even offcuts are reused in accent details or repaired panels.
Each order includes full sourcing details on request. You can trace origin, grade, and batch.
If your hotel celebrates Diwali, we can create furniture with Rangoli panels, diya patterns, or gold-inlay borders. For Holi, we can use splash forms, bright paint fills, or Bandhani dots across benches or cabinets.
You can also choose temple-inspired lines for prayer zones, Pichwai art for headboards, or floral rings from Onam to match console tables.
We align motifs with material. Bone, mother of pearl, painted wood, or white metal—all can carry patterns without fade or damage. Each motif is sketched first and shaped into the final structure. Every line is hand done.
Tell us your season, your story, or your guest culture. We will design a visual form that speaks it.
Each inlay piece is fixed into a carved base using strong adhesive. Once the design is placed, the surface is filled, leveled, and sealed with a transparent top layer. This layer keeps dust out and blocks moisture.
We use polish that can resist light cleaning liquids, dry cloth friction, and hand contact. In public areas like reception, lobby walls, or spa counters, the inlay stays stable with no edge lift or color fade.
For very high footfall zones, we place inlay panels above hand or bag height to avoid scratch lines. The layout and location are adjusted to reduce touch strain.
Each finished piece passes a tap test, heat patch check, and wipe test before packing.
Artisans in Jodhpur carve mango wood with deep knowledge of form and proportion. Inlay specialists from Udaipur and Bhuj shape bone, mother of pearl, and white metal with hand tools and traditional methods. Each team handles only one stage. That keeps the finish sharp and consistent.
Painted work comes from families trained in Havelli wall techniques. They adapt mural motifs into furniture panels using brushes, pigments, and natural oils.
Every unit moves through craft, drying, finishing, and inspection before it is packed. We do not outsource work. Every maker is part of our system. You can trace who built your piece and where it was made.
The process starts after your drawing is approved. Materials are assigned. Craft is scheduled. Each stage moves through joinery, carving, inlay, painting, and polish. Drying takes time. So does quality control.
We do not rush stages. Inlay must set. Paint must cure. Wood must rest before sealing. This keeps the finish stable after shipping.
You get updates at each step. Once ready, the pieces are packed and moved into freight clearance.
For phased orders or multi-site rollouts, we align production with your handover dates. Delivery windows are fixed in advance.
We split large orders into clear phases. Each batch is grouped by furniture type, finish tone, and delivery schedule. That helps us maintain color consistency, polish match, and batch identity across all units.
For hotels opening in stages or across cities, we align production with your rollout plan. Each site gets a mapped handover sheet. Pieces are labeled by room type and sent with fitting documents.
Packaging is coded. Master cartons carry QR-linked checklists for unpacking, install, and reorder.
Every project has its own timeline chart, with buffers for export, transit, and customs hold. From dispatch to delivery, all movement is tracked.
Our export process includes all required paperwork. That covers HS codes, commercial invoices, bill of lading, country-specific clearance forms, and packing lists. Each set is checked twice before dispatch.
Container loading is done at our facility. Items are wrapped with foam, edge covers, and shrink sheets. Wooden crates are used for fragile surfaces like inlay or polished paint.
We partner with global freight agents. Shipments can be port-to-port or door delivery, depending on your import channel.
Every export order includes a track file. This contains weight sheets, box dimensions, safety labels, and item lists. Customs officials get digital copies in advance.
If your site has special import rules, we align our documents with that regulation.
First, we wrap the full surface with foam sheets. Next, the corners and edges get hard buffers to protect joints and carvings. This prevents dents during stacking or shift.
Painted and inlay units get an extra layer of plastic wrap. Then we use corrugated boards to keep dust, moisture, and sharp contact out.
For export freight, items are placed in wooden crates. Every crate is nailed, sealed, and marked with weight, content type, and orientation. Fragile surfaces face inward. Inside padding is added for vibration control.
All packaging follows drop-resistance checks. We use shock strip tape, silica pouches, and impact markers on sensitive loads. That way, you know if a carton was mishandled in transit.
We log every crate number. Each shipment carries impact tape and packing proof. If a panel is cracked or a corner is chipped, we review the freight scan, packing photo, and material list.
If the issue is caused in transit, we offer three options.
Our aftercare team manages the file. You do not need to speak to the shipper. Every step is documented from dispatch to delivery.
We aim to resolve damage cases within 7-14 working days.
Each space needs a different flow, finish, and use plan. We build for each zone with the right form, scale, and material. The guest room needs function and warmth. The lobby needs first impact.
For small rooms, we build narrow consoles, floating wall shelves, and bedside units with built-in lighting. Storage benches double as seating. Coffee tables carry drawers underneath.
We also offer foldable desks, stackable stools, and slim wardrobes with dual-purpose zones. Every piece is measured for movement space. Corners stay clear. Surfaces open flat.
Modular layouts are planned room-wise. Each furniture set links with others for flow. For example, a mirror hooks above a desk with matching width, and the wardrobe door swings without blocking walkways.
We start with your brand guide. That includes your color palette, mood words, guest profile, and interior vision. Then we select materials, motifs, and silhouettes that match.
For example, a coastal brand may lean toward whitewashed wood and soft edge carving. A heritage hotel may need gold leaf, lotus inlay, and warm walnut tones. Spa suites often call for silent lines, soft forms, and light-reflective polish.
Every paint shade is matched to your interior walls or linen colors. If you use printed textiles, we draw from that for carving or metalwork cues.
We also design custom motifs that reflect your logo, your geography, or your culture. That includes Rangoli shapes, Pichwai icons, or abstract forms drawn from regional art.
Interior designers send us moodboards, floor plans, and palette references. We match furniture form, finish, and detailing with their creative brief. Our team prepares visual mockups, sample layouts, and material swatches for client review.
Architects receive dimensioned drawings, CAD-compatible files, and finish documentation. We align on layout plans, material codes, and installation conditions. For large projects, we also sync furniture volumes with site phasing and joinery checks.
If needed, we assist with Revit-ready integration or custom line development for architectural millwork. Every design is shared in export-safe format with clear labels and size references.
Wooden furniture is sealed with humidity-safe polish. The grain is closed using multi-pass sanding, followed by a sealing layer that blocks air and moisture. We also use hard wax oil or matte lacquer with low absorption rates.
Inlay panels get resin coat buffers. These fill micro-gaps and stop water from entering around bone or mother of pearl. Edges are curved or sealed to stop flaking from temperature swings.
We avoid open-pore wood types near the coast. Instead, we use stable mango, seasoned hardwood, or marine-safe ply for under-frames.
Joints are fixed with moisture-tolerant adhesive. All finishes pass salt spray simulation and wipe cycle testing before packing.
Every artisan we work with is paid directly, per piece, without delay. Payment terms are fixed before the work starts. No commission is taken from their side.
We run closed-loop production. That means no subcontracting to unverified workshops. We know every carver, painter, and inlay worker in the chain. Each one works from a safe, ventilated space with proper tools and rest breaks.
We support skill training and promote lineage continuity. If a family has passed down a craft for three generations, our goal is to keep it alive without forcing pace or cutting cost.
Every piece you buy protects a skill. Every order helps preserve local identity. We choose this path because fast furniture fades. But dignity does not.
We only use camel or buffalo bone that is collected after natural death. No animal is ever harmed for raw material. Each batch is traceable to local suppliers who follow animal care laws and wildlife control norms.
Bones are cleaned, sun-dried, and shaped in artisan workshops under open records. The supply is limited, so we work in small batches. That keeps the process natural and respectful.
Every inlay line is built on craft, not cost-cutting. If the material is not available, we pause the run. We also offer resin or reclaimed shell alternatives for clients who prefer bone-free options.
We honour the material and those who shape it. That is the only way to protect both craft and conscience.
Wood is sourced from managed farms or reclaimed stocks. We use mango trees that stop fruiting, not forest-cut timber. Offcuts are reused in panels or accents. Sawdust is recycled for filler or compressed sheets.
Each finish is water-based or oil-based, with low VOC. Brushes are washed, not dumped. We test every paint and sealant for indoor air safety.
Crates are made from reused ply or cardboard, not fresh timber. Labels are printed with soy ink. Packing volume is measured to avoid oversized freight.
No part of the process is outsourced to uncontrolled hands. Every tool, pigment, and step is counted. Every person in the chain knows what they are working with and why.
Bone inlay, hand carving, and painted motifs are all done using tools and hand motions passed through family lines. The way the wrist turns. The way a brush moves across grain. Those do not change.
But the room needs change. Guest habits change. So we adjust.
We bring innovation in placement, not in principle. Inlay once made for royal trunks now sits on modern coffee tables. A Havelli painting once seen on a palace arch now rests on a villa headboard.
We do not replace the method. We expand its use. Materials are sealed better. Paints are safer. Shapes fit tighter. But the hand that does the work still follows the old rhythm.
At Iris, every piece is built for your space alone. The size is measured for your room. The tone is tuned to your palette. The motif is drawn from your culture, your brand, or your story.
You get direct access to the artisan network. No middle layers. No catalogue copying. Materials are real. Edges are hand-checked. Finishes are sealed to last under daily use.
We do not build furniture. We build function that carries identity. You do not need to re-brand to match a chair. We make the chair match your brand.
Painted pieces need a wipe with a clean microfiber cloth. Never scrub or use rough pads. For spots or marks, use a pH-neutral solution. Let it sit, dab gently, and dry fully.
Keep all inlay or painted units away from heat vents, wet corners, or high spill zones. Rotation under indirect light helps even aging. If polish fades, we provide a top-up kit or guide your team with a care file.
One check per quarter is enough. Wipe, inspect edges, refresh protection. That will keep the surface fresh and the story sharp.
If a unit gets chipped, scratched, or faded from daily hotel use, our team helps fix it. Small issues like edge rub, polish dulling, or color scuff can be resolved with a touch-up kit. We send the exact match for your surface.
For deeper damage, we assess the piece with photos. Then we guide your team step-by-step or send a local craft partner if available. Inlay sections can be cleaned, re-fixed, and sealed. Paint patches can be layered without mismatch.
If a full unit needs workshop repair, we coordinate pickup, rework, and re-delivery within a planned window.
Every project includes optional annual care. You can book a check once or set up seasonal retouch. We keep your archive on file, so no finish or motif is ever lost.
We offer a 12-month warranty from the delivery date. This covers joinery defects, structural faults, loose inlay, chipped edges, and finish issues caused under standard use. Paint layers, drawer slides, and door gaps are included.
The warranty does not apply to impact damage, chemical spills, rough handling, or cleaning mistakes. Every repair request is reviewed with photos, log sheets, and usage notes.
If the issue falls under valid coverage, we fix it. That means replacement, local repair, or supply of matching parts depending on what the case needs.
You can reorder the same unit or request changes based on new room types, materials, or finish needs. We store your sketches, sizes, color codes, and photos. This lets us match earlier work without delay.
If you open a new property or add more rooms, we use your previous style sheet and align batch polish. Inlay patterns, paint shades, and carving depth stay consistent.
You can also request updates. A cabinet may become a console. A drawer front may carry a new motif. Every past job gives you a faster head start.
Repeat orders help keep the brand feel clear across locations. We keep the original file ready. You only need to ask.
Our design page has a simple contact box. Fill in your name, location, and what you need. You can upload sketches, room photos, or links. That triggers a call or email from our team within 24 hours.
If your project has drawings, we review them first. Then we suggest a layout or design path. Every consultation is one-on-one. You speak directly with someone who understands space, material, and timeline.
You can also book a virtual session. We walk through collections, show samples, and build your flow live. Once the direction is clear, we start your custom quote.