Every Eyda Homes creation carries a legacy from artisan hands to your home. Discover how your cushion, curtain, or rug travels across time and tradition to become part of your living space.
A Story Woven Through Time
Every Eyda Homes piece begins with a storyline spun from heritage, heart, and artistry. Long before it accents your sofa or brightens your bedroom, it starts its journey in the hands of skilled artisans working on looms in sunlit villages. Eyda is a homegrown collective of these artisans and designers, blending India’s rich textile traditions with contemporary design sensibilities. When you bring home an Eyda piece, you carry a “story of thread, time, and thoughtful hands.” This means that each cushion, throw, or curtain isn’t just made; it’s crafted, slowly and gently, often by second- or third-generation makers who have inherited their skills through generations. It’s no surprise, then, that at Eyda, beauty truly begins with patience.
Founding this brand was itself part of that story. Eyda Homes was born from decades of expertise in textiles, guided by family traditions. Founder Pavas Sharma grew up “alongside the loom,” learning the art of fabric from his father and grandfather. With a family legacy dating back to the 1980s in India’s artisan communities, Eyda was built to honor those roots. Today, the brand may be based in the USA, but its soul remains firmly in the Indian craft workshops where it all started. This blend of old and new Indian hearts with a global vision sets the stage for each Eyda item’s incredible journey from loom to living room.
From Concept to Creation: Inspired Design & Quality Materials
It all begins with inspiration. Each Eyda design starts as an idea drawn from a tapestry of sources: a vintage motif on a palace wall, a pattern in nature, or a beloved ancestral textile. They all are seasonal textiles for every Indian home. Designers sketch patterns that marry centuries-old traditions with modern aesthetics, ensuring that an Eyda piece feels at home in a contemporary living room even as it carries echoes of the past. Whether it’s a cushion cover inspired by Mughal floral art or a table runner borrowing geometric motifs from tribal weaves, the design process respects heritage while adapting to present-day tastes. The goal is to create “timeless pieces with a modern twist,” so that your Eyda decor complements both cozy boho spaces and chic minimalist homes.
Once the design is in place, attention turns to materials because a story is only as good as the thread that weaves it. Eyda Homes insists on the finest natural materials for every product. This means using high-quality, eco-conscious textiles: soft hand-spun cotton, rich linens, airy silks, and pure wool when needed. Many fabrics are organic or sourced from local farming cooperatives, ensuring purity and sustainability. The dyes, too, often come from nature; think plant-based pigments from indigo leaves, turmeric, or madder root, yielding deep blues, sunny yellows, and earthy reds. In fact, Eyda uses only the finest raw materials, from organic cotton to natural dyes and plant-based finishes. This careful material selection isn’t just for eco-friendliness; it also guarantees that each item is comfortable, durable, and safe in your home. There’s a reason an Eyda pillow feels so special to the touchit’s woven from quality fibers imbued with care from the very start.
But materials alone don’t make magic; people do. Behind the scenes, Eyda’s team plans out how to bring the design to life using traditional techniques. Will that throw blanket be handwoven on a loom? Should the motif be hand-printed or embroidered? These choices matter, because they determine which master artisans will be entrusted with each step. By the time the concept phase is done, a full roadmap is drawn: from picking the cotton fibers and dye baths to deciding on weave patterns and finishing touches. With design and materials ready, the stage is set for the real hands-on work to begin.
Handloom Weaving: Crafting the Fabric
On the loom: A skilled weaver works on a hand-knotted rug using a traditional loom. Each yarn is tied and woven by hand, a meticulous craft that can take weeks or months for one piece.
With bundles of dyed yarn in hand and a pattern in mind, artisans prepare the loom at the very heart of the creation process. The loom is strung with countless threads (the warp), awaiting the dance of the shuttle carrying the weft thread. In a small workshop, sometimes an open courtyard or a humble thatched studio, a weaver begins to interlace threads, back and forth, line by line. There are no machines humming here, only the rhythmic click of wood, the soft whoosh of the shuttle, and the weaver’s focused breaths. Often, multiple family members or community artisans work side by side, continuing “generational legacies” of weaving together. They use techniques passed down through time, perhaps a grandmother’s method for achieving an even tension or a secret pattern taught by an elder. In each rug, curtain, or length of fabric, those inherited skills are invisibly woven in.
Handloom weaving is an exercise in patience and precision. Unlike power-loomed fabric that churns out yards in minutes, hand-woven textiles grow slowly, sometimes just a few inches in a long day’s work. For complex weaves or intricate patterns, a single small rug can take weeks, while a larger, detailed piece might
span many months of focused labor. This is a slow design in action: every pass of the shuttle is deliberate, every knot tied with care. If a thread breaks, the weaver pauses to fix it by hand. If a motif is emerging crooked, adjustments are gently made. The resulting fabric bears subtle irregularities: a thicker line here, a minor color variation there, which are not flaws, but the fingerprints of the artisan. No two handloom pieces are exactly alike, and that uniqueness is something no factory can replicate. It’s amazing to think that the slight slub in your Eyda cushion cover’s texture is a reminder that a human being, not an impersonal machine, guided that thread.
Consider an Eyda handwoven throw pillow cover in the making. The weaver might be using a traditional pattern known in their village, say, a subtle diamond weave common in parts of India. As they work, the fabric grows with a rich, tactile texture. The cotton yarn, having been hand-spun, creates a lovely nubby feel in the cloth. The artisan’s feet pump pedals, and their arms expertly lift and slide threads, maintaining a steady rhythm. They might pause every so often to check the work, ensuring edges (the selvedge) are neat and straight or that the intended dimensions are on track. Hours and days blend into the cloth as it lengthens. The dedication is visible in the dense, sturdy weave that forms this material, which is built to last, perhaps to be passed down as a cherished item. “ Each knot contributes to the design, making it a true testament to human skill and patience,” as one description of hand-crafted rugs puts it. That sentiment holds true for all of Eyda’s handwoven pieces.
Eventually, the weaver finishes the final row and gently lifts the textile off the loom. What comes off is not yet a cushion cover or a table runner, but a raw handwoven fabric panel, rich with potential. It carries the soul of its maker, the countless decisions and adjustments, and the expertise of hands and heart. The loom has done its part in this journey. Now, this freshly woven fabric is ready for the next chapter, where other forms of artistry might further adorn it.
Beyond the Loom: Block Printing and Embroidery
Once the base fabric is ready, many Eyda pieces undergo additional traditional techniques to imbue them with color, pattern, and personality. Two of the most beloved crafts that Eyda employs are hand block printing and hand-guided embroidery. These arts add another layer of human touch to your decor, literally stamping or stitching stories onto the cloth.
Hand Block Printing Painting Patterns by Hand
A master artisan hand-block prints fabric using a carved wooden block dipped in dye. Each color is applied one at a time, resulting in intricate patterns full of character.
If weaving builds the canvas, block printing adorns it. This age-old Indian craft involves printing designs on fabric using hand-carved wooden blocks, each acting like a stamp. Imagine a seasoned artisan in Rajasthan or Gujarat, dipping a detailed wooden block into a tray of dye and pressing it onto cotton cloth with practiced precision. They repeat this, block by block, color by color, until a beautiful pattern emerges across the fabric. The tradition of block printing in India dates back many centuries (at least to the 12th century historians say) and has produced iconic motifs admired worldwide. From the delicate floral sprays of Bagru and Sanganeri prints (known for their elegant vines and blooms) to the bold geometric Ajrakh patterns of Kutch, these designs carry deep cultural significance.
The process is as enchanting as the result. First, master block-carvers chisel designs into blocks of teak or sheesham wood. Each design can be incredibly intricate, perhaps a paisley, a dancing peacock, or a field of tiny polka dots, and for multicolor patterns, multiple blocks are made (one for each color layer). For example, a traditional Jaipur floral motif might use one block for an outline, a second for fill colors, and a third for fine details.
Next, the printer lays out the fabric on a flat table. With dye prepared in shallow trays, the artisan dips the first block (say, the outline pattern) into the dye, wipes off excess, then firmly presses it onto the fabric. Thap! They might give the block a gentle whack or press to ensure a clear impression. Then they lift it and move to the next spot, aligning carefully by eye so that the pattern continues seamlessly. This alignment, called registration, is a true test of skill: each imprint must line up with the previous ones to create a continuous design. The printer will repeat this hundreds, even thousands, of times across the fabric length. For the second color, they take the next block, dip it in a different dye, and print in between or over the outlines, and so on. Little by little, the fabric transforms into a vibrant tapestry of motifs, all by the power of a steady hand and an artistic eye.
One remarkable aspect of block printing is how it has become a community craft. In some villages, entire families are involved; perhaps the men carve the blocks, the women do the printing or dyeing, and everyone pitches in for washing and drying the cloth in the sun afterwards. Natural dyes are often used by traditional printers, requiring the fabrics to be dried under the sky and then washed to set the colors. When you see an Eyda block-printed curtain with, say, a gentle floral repeat, know that each flower was stamped by hand. The imperceptible variations in color density or spacing are what give it life a subtle reminder that a human artisan, not a machine, placed every single motif. This is artistry you can literally feel when you run your hand over the fabric’s surface.
Hand Embroidery: Threads of Artistry and Identity
After weaving and printing, another craft may lend its charm to Eyda pieces: hand-guided embroidery. Embroidery is the art of decorating fabric with needle and thread (and sometimes mirrors, beads, or sequins), and India has an astonishing variety of embroidery traditions. From the mirrored shisha work of Rajasthan to the dense floral crewel embroidery of Kashmir to the elaborate zardozi metallic threadwork once used in royal garments, each region has its signature stitches and stories.
For Eyda’s home decor items, embroidery is often used to add texture and character. Artisans might trace the printed patterns with thread, accentuating a leaf here or a bird there in gentle stitches. Or they might create tufted designs and geometric patterns by hand-tufting or crewel stitches to give a pillow a rich, tactile surface. For example, an Eyda cushion cover might be hand-embroidered with a Bohemian motif, a line of running stitches forming tribal patterns, or knots and twists creating a tufted boho look. These details make the difference between a merely pretty pillow and one that feels one-of-a-kind.
Eyda’s commitment to hand embroidery means that many pieces are literally “stitched gently” with care. An embroiderer can spend days on a single cushion cover, adding finishing touches that elevate the piece to art. They often work in small workshops or even at home, hooping the fabric and guiding the needle in and out with patient concentration. The threads they sew not only add beauty but also carry forward cultural artistry. Some of Eyda’s embroidery and modern curtain styles are inspired by traditional motifs; you might find a hint of Kantha running stitch (a style from Bengal that looks like rows of dashed lines) on a throw, or perhaps a touch of Phulkari (Punjabi floral embroidery) influence in a floral cushion. By blending these elements, Eyda ensures each product holds a connection to India’s diverse crafts.
It’s worth noting that all these embellishments, be they printing or embroidery, are done ethically and sustainably. Eyda works with artisan partners who follow fair-trade practices and safe workshop conditions.
The dyes used in printing are often natural or AZO-free (low-toxicity), and even the threads for embroidery are chosen for quality and eco-friendliness where possible. The result is that by the time the fabric for your Eyda piece has been woven, printed, and embroidered, it has passed through many caring hands, each leaving an imprint of skill and love. Now, the decorated fabric is nearly ready to become the product you’ll use; it just needs to be fashioned into its final form.
Finishing Touches: From Fabric to Final Piece
The journey continues from the crafting tables to the tailoring section. At this stage, the richly woven and decorated fabric is cut and stitched into the finished product, whether that’s a cushion cover, curtain, table runner, or duvet cover. Think of this as the moment a story is bound into a book: all the chapters (materials, weaving, printing, embroidery) are compiled, and now the book gets its binding and final polish. Skilled tailors and seamstresses take over here. With measuring tapes, scissors, and sewing machines (or sometimes still hand-stitching for delicate parts), they carefully cut the fabric according to the product dimensions. Precision is key; the placement of a motif on a cushion cover, for instance, needs to be perfectly centered, or the symmetry on a pair of curtain panels should match. Often, patterns are laid out to minimize waste, and any scrap pieces might be saved for smaller products or patchwork, aligning with Eyda’s low-waste principles.
For a cushion cover, the tailor will cut two squares (or a square and a backing piece) of the handloom fabric. If the design calls for piping or decorative borders, those are prepared next. The pieces are then stitched together, usually inside-out for a clean finish, with sturdy thread. Eyda’s modern cushion covers feature details like invisible zippers or envelope closures, functional touches that make it easy to insert a pillow but don’t detract from the look. These closures are sewn in carefully. If the item comes from trending curtain ideas, the fabric gets hemmed on all sides, and header styles (like rod pockets or tabs) are sewn at the top. A table runner might get a lining added for weight and then be top-stitched around the edges to keep its shape. Throughout, the craftsperson double-checks the alignment of patterns and consistency of stitching. They take pride in perfection, remembering that a product destined for a discerning home must meet high standards.
After stitching, each piece undergoes quality checks. Think of it as a final read-through of our story to catch any typos. The Eyda team examines the item for any loose threads, uneven seams, or color inconsistencies. They trim excess threads. Buttons, tassels, or ties (if any) are tug-tested to be sure they’re securely attached.
Many items are also given a gentle wash and press at this stage. Washing serves two purposes: it removes any residual dye or markings and lets the fabric relax into its natural state (handmade textiles can have tension that a wash releases). It also ensures that when you receive your item, it’s clean, soft, and ready to use immediately. For block-printed items, washing will rinse out any unattached dye, and for embroidered ones, it confirms the threads are colorfast. Once dried, the item is pressed or steamed so it looks its best.
A quality control artisan runs their eyes and hands over the finished product inch by inch. Only when they are satisfied that this piece is as beautiful and durable as intended do they fold it up neatly. The story is nearly ready to leave the artisan’s world and enter yours.
Packed with Care: Sustainable Packaging & Global Delivery
After all the love and labor poured into creating an Eyda piece, the final steps ensure it travels safely across continents from our door to yours. Packaging is often an overlooked part of a product journey, but not at Eyda Homes. Here, the team has reimagined packaging as an extension of their values; it should be gentle on the planet and reflective of the care within.
Every order is packed with eco-friendly materials, avoiding plastics and excessive waste. Instead of poly bags, your cushion cover might come wrapped in recycled paper or a reusable cotton pouch. Labels and tags are typically made from recycled paper as well, and any protective wrapping uses biodegradable options. This way, the beautiful handwoven textile you ordered isn’t tainted by single-use plastics by the time it reaches you.
Inside the package, you might find a little thank-you note or a card telling the story of your piece. Eyda loves to share the origins of its products with customers, perhaps a few lines about the craft (for example, “handwoven in Rajasthan using heritage khadi techniques” or “block-printed by artisans in Jaipur”). These personal touches turn opening your package into an experience, almost like receiving a gift. They remind you that your purchase has real people and culture behind it.
Once packed, the item is dispatched through reliable shipping channels. Eyda Homes, though rooted in India’s craft communities, maintains a base in the United States, which allows for fast, trackable shipping especially for U.S. customers. International orders are handled just as efficiently, with partners that ensure parcels arrive securely across Europe, Asia, or wherever home may be. In fact, Eyda supplies not just individual homes but also works with global retailers and interior designers, meaning their logistics expertise is well-honed. No matter the distance, they strive to bridge the gap between the artisan and the homeowner as quickly and safely as possible.
For you as a customer, this means you can watch the journey of your piece via tracking updates, knowing it’s making its way from its birthplace into your hands. There’s often a palpable excitement awaiting a handcrafted Indian fabrics item. Unlike a factory-made object, a handmade piece somehow carries a bit of its journey with it.
We’ve heard customers say they imagine the places their item passed through: perhaps a bustling workshop in Jaipur, then a shipping hub in Delhi, onto a plane, through customs, and finally onto the familiar delivery truck in their own neighborhood. In a sense, the “living room” destination could be thousands of miles from the “loom” where it all began, yet the connection remains intact.
Importantly, Eyda also offers customer-friendly policies like easy returns or exchanges and even custom designs by Eyda orders in some cases. They understand that building a global brand means providing trust and convenience to match the product quality. So if anything ever goes amiss in transit, or if you have a special request (say you need a longer length of drapes or a matching set of cushion covers), Eyda’s team is ready to help. This dedication to service ensures that the journey to your living room is as thoughtfully managed as the journey of making the piece.
Your Home, Your Story: Unboxing and Styling an Eyda Piece
Handcrafted decor brings warmth and character to a living space. A handwoven rug like this one can tie together a room’s design while carrying the story of its craftsmanship.
At long last, the day arrives literally. A package sits at your doorstep or in your mailbox, adorned perhaps with a little Eyda Homes logo sticker. Inside it is something far more than just home decor: it’s a slice of heritage wrapped up just for you. Unboxing your Eyda piece is often a delightful ritual.
You open the eco-friendly wrapping, maybe untying a jute string or unsealing a paper envelope, and there it is the handcrafted cushion cover or throw you’ve been eagerly anticipating. The first thing you might notice is the texture: you run your fingers across the fabric and feel the raised weave, the block print’s gentle ridges, or the soft tufting of embroidery. It feels alive, almost as if you can sense the hands that wove and embellished it.
Take a moment to drink in the details. Notice the rich hue of the dyes, perhaps the deep indigo blue of a block-printed pattern that could only come from natural indigo plants, or the subtle variation in a hand-dyed yarn that gives the fabric a warm, organic character. If it’s a pillow cover, flip it to see the neat stitching and the discrete zipper or overlap on the back.
Appreciate that even the reverse side, though simple, has been finished with care (no unsightly loose threads here!). Perhaps you catch a faint earthy scent; sometimes handloom textiles retain a whisper of the natural fibers or herbal soaps used in their wash. It’s a comforting, grounding smell, unlike the chemical finish of many mass-produced fabrics.
Now comes the best part: bringing this piece into your space. Place that cushion on your favorite armchair or in the center of your sofa. Drape the new handwoven throw over the back of a couch or at the foot of your bed. Hang the block-printed curtains up to let the daylight glow through their patterns.
As you step back and look, you’ll see your room transform almost instantly. These artisan-made accents have a way of adding soul to a space. The cushion isn’t just a pop of color; it’s a conversation starter, radiating a subtle vibe of warmth and culture. The rug isn’t just covering your floor; it’s grounding the whole room in a sense of story and comfort.
In a world where one can buy generic decor at the click of a button, you’ve chosen something different, something personal. An Eyda handwoven rug under your coffee table, for instance, might tie together your seating area with its soft texture and story. Guests may compliment it, giving you the chance to share, “It’s handmade in India, part of this artisan project.”
How gratifying is it to know exactly where your decor comes from and to feel the authenticity in it? Such pieces often become heirlooms. You might find yourself treating them with a bit more care, fluffing that pillow lovingly or rolling up the rug when the dog’s paws are muddy. That’s the respect a lovingly made item earns, quite naturally.
Moreover, living with an Eyda piece can subtly change how you view home decorating. Each time you adjust the curtains or make your bed with an Eyda bedspread, you’re reminded of the global journey behind everyday objects. Your home becomes not just a showcase of your style but a mosaic of stories.
For those of us who love to travel or appreciate world cultures, having these crafts at home is like having a piece of faraway land right in our living room. Imagine curling up on your couch, the embroidered Eyda thrown over you, perhaps with a cup of chai tea in hand, and feeling connected to the artisan in a distant village who helped create this moment of comfort. In this way, your story and the daily life you lead in your home intertwine with theirs, the creators’. It’s a beautiful exchange.
It’s also worth noting the practical side: Eyda pieces are made to be lived with. They’re not so precious that you can’t use them every day. The robust cotton weaves can handle family movie nights and the occasional pillow fight. The colorfast dyes mean you don’t have to worry that a sunny spot will ruin the vibrancy (just follow the simple care instructions).
And should you ever need to freshen them up, most items are easily washable at home. Part of honoring the artisans’ work is making sure it lasts for years, even generations. With minimal care, gentle washes, and avoiding harsh chemicals, your Eyda decor will age gracefully, perhaps even getting softer and more charismatic over time (as good textiles do).
In essence, when you integrate an Eyda piece into your home, you’re not just decorating; you’re curating an environment of meaning and mindful beauty. It stands as a quiet testament to slow craft in a fast-paced world, a “quiet rebellion” against throwaway culture. Every glance at it can remind you that good things take time and that there’s value in the meaningful choices we make.
Why Eyda Homes Stands Out as the Best Home Decor Brand
In a market flooded with decor options, Eyda Homes sets itself apart by embodying qualities that discerning homeowners and design lovers cherish. It’s not just about selling cushions or curtains; it’s about delivering
an experience and a value system with each product. Here are a few reasons Eyda Homes is making its mark as a contender for the best artisan home decor brands for those seeking authenticity and quality:
Heritage Craftsmanship
Every Eyda piece is handmade by skilled artisans who carry forward generations of expertise. This isn’t factory-made, assembly-line decor; it’s living art. From handloom weaving to block printing and embroidery, traditional techniques infuse soul into every item. You can feel the craftsmanship and know that your purchase supports the continuation of these arts. Notably, over 7 million craftspeople work in India’s handicrafts sector today a majority of them women and by choosing artisan-made décor, you’re directly supporting those livelihoods and preserving cultural skills.
Quality & Durability
Eyda uses premium natural materials and time-honored methods, resulting in products built to last. The fabrics are often high-grade cotton, linen, or silk with robust weaves and high thread counts. Dyes are chosen for richness and longevity. The care in crafting means seams are strong, colors steadfast, and the item can withstand real life. This is decor you can love for years without it fraying or fading truly an investment in quality and longevity.
Sustainable & Ethical Practices
From sourcing to packaging, Eyda is deeply committed to doing things responsibly. Materials are often organic or sustainably sourced, and dyes are plant-based or low-impact. Production follows fair trade principles, providing fair wages and safe conditions for artisans. Plus, the plastic-free packaging and low-waste philosophy mean your beautiful purchase doesn’t burden the environment. It feels good to buy from a brand that cares about the planet and people as much as about profit.
Modern Design, Timeless Appeal
Eyda’s design team excels at blending contemporary style with traditional charm.The result is decor that fits seamlessly in modern homes, whether your vibe is bohemian, minimalist, classic, or eclectic. These pieces carry a bit of global flair (like a hint of Indian boho print or Japandi simplicity) yet remain versatile. The patterns and colors are on-trend but not trendy; they won’t be out of style next season. You’re decorating with items that have a timeless, story-rich quality and also align with current interior design sensibilities.
Global Reach with Personal Touch
Although rooted in India, Eyda Homes operates with a global mindset. The company can ship quickly to customers worldwide (helped by its U.S. base for North America), and it offers customer service that is responsive and personal. Need a custom size or a matching set? Eyda is open to special requests, reflecting a flexibility rarely found in big-box brands. They also ensure easy returns/exchanges if needed, so you can shop with confidence. It’s a boutique, artisan brand experience with the convenience and professionalism of a larger company.
Ultimately, Eyda Homes isn’t just a brand; it’s a legacy. The company’s very foundation is about preserving cultural heritage and supporting artisan livelihoods while delivering beautiful products to modern homes. In an era of conscious consumerism, Eyda stands out by providing home décor that has a meaningful backstory and a positive impact. It’s the kind of brand you feel proud to support and showcase in your living space. They strive to be the best home decor brand not by sheer volume or aggressive marketing, but by authenticity, quality, and the genuine connections they foster between maker, product, and consumer.
Conclusion: Weaving Culture and Comfort Into Your Home
The journey of an Eyda piece from loom to living room is a reminder that the things we decorate our homes with can carry profound meaning. What started as cotton in a field and ideas in an artist’s sketchbook transforms, through skill and dedication, into a cushion on your couch or a throw on your bed that radiates warmth and character.
By the time it’s in your hands, it has been touched by many hearts: the farmers, the spinners, the dyers, the weavers, the printers, the embroiderers, the tailors, and the packagers, all of whom poured their expertise and pride into creating something beautiful for you. In a very real sense, you didn’t just buy a décor item; you brought home a legacy.
Look around your living room or bedroom once your Eyda piece has found its place. It might be subtle, but the space feels different, doesn’t it? There’s a story quietly unfurling in that corner chair with the indigo block-print pillow or on the dining table adorned with a handloom runner.
These objects invite you and your guests to slow down and appreciate the little details: the exact curve of a printed vine, the comfy heft of the weave, and the knowledge that it was crafted far away by someone keeping an age-old tradition alive. Your home becomes a sanctuary not just of your personal style, but of human creativity and cultural heritage.
By choosing Eyda Homes, you’ve also become a part of a larger narrative that values sustainability, supports artisans, and treasures the art of making things by hand. It’s a choice to value connection over convenience, story over sameness. And yet, Eyda makes it convenient and contemporary, proving that we don’t have to sacrifice style or ease to have ethical, meaningful décor. This is the future of home décor: items with soul and brands with conscience.
So, as you curl up with that cozy Eyda throw or admire the sunlight filtering through your new hand-block printed drapes, know that you are not just a consumer but a curator of living traditions. The journey of your Eyda piece doesn’t end in your living room. It lives on each day as you use it, love it, and maybe pass it down one day. Come visit us at Eyda Homes and it becomes part of your story too.
From the loom to the living room, the voyage is truly magical, and it’s only the beginning once it reaches you. Thank you for being a part of this journey.