New Arrivals from Craighill in 2025

BrandsWalk Creative |
Craighill approaches design with quiet confidence. Their objects are built around purposeful form and tactile satisfaction, offering a kind of everyday clarity that earns attention through use, not appearance. Whether it’s the weight of a brass bottle opener or the interlocking logic of a precision puzzle, each piece feels intentional.

While trends shift quickly, Craighill returns to the essentials — refining them through material, proportion, and construction that lasts. Products like the Match Striker, Ripple Opener, and Venn Puzzle don’t compete for attention. They simply belong — fitting into the rhythm of daily life with understated precision.

The Match Striker: A Small Object with Intent

Some objects earn their place through simplicity and weight. The Craighill Match Striker is one of them. Made from solid brass or stainless steel, it feels grounded in the hand and visually settled in a room. Its function is direct — striking a match — but the experience of using it adds a layer of rhythm to something ordinary.

Every material choice contributes to that experience. The brass feels warm and substantial, while the steel brings a crisp coolness. Its subtly textured surface provides just enough grip, and the sculpted form rests confidently on a table or shelf without asking for attention. The Match Striker doesn’t need to stand out. It simply feels right to have around.

Ripple Opener and Venn Puzzle: Design with Presence and Play

The Ripple Opener introduces a subtle gesture into an everyday tool. Its wave-like form creates a visual rhythm, but it’s more than just a shape. The ridged surface offers a natural grip, and the balance of weight and curve makes opening a bottle feel smooth and steady. It’s the kind of object that lives quietly on a countertop or bar cart, ready when needed, always satisfying to handle.

The Venn Puzzle shifts the tone — less utility, more curiosity. Made from three interlocking pieces of solid metal, it invites interaction before explanation. There’s no instruction card, just form and instinct. Solving it is tactile and deliberate, but even unsolved, it carries weight and presence. It sits on a desk like a question, offering something to do with your hands and something to think through.

Together, these two pieces show the range of Craighill’s thinking — from practical refinement to intentional play. Neither is showy. Both are designed to last, and to stay interesting.

Craighill designs objects to be lived with. They’re made to be touched, used, and kept. The materials feel honest. The forms stay clear.

These are everyday pieces that become part of your routine — not because they demand attention, but because they fit. They offer a kind of calm, quiet design that holds up over time.

That’s what makes them worth returning to.