Home Objects in Tunisia
Objects that shape space and support daily life

How to start
Start with one object that matches how you live.
A basket for storage.
A textile for comfort.
A ceramic piece for eating and serving.
Build from there if needed.
What defines a home object
Home objects here are not decorative additions.
They are part of how space works — placed with purpose, used daily, and shaped by material and environment.
A basket stores and allows air to circulate.
A textile regulates warmth and separates space.
A ceramic piece contains, serves, and structures meals.
Objects exist because they solve something.
Explore by type
Start with how the object will be used.
How objects shape space
Space is not empty. It is organized through use.
Light moves through openings and reflects on surfaces.
Heat is managed through thickness, textiles, and airflow.
Movement defines where objects are placed and how they are reached.
Storage keeps what is needed close, without clutter.
They do not sit randomly. They make the space work.
Where these objects are used

Home objects follow simple spatial logic.
In eating spaces, they serve, contain, and organize meals.
In resting spaces, they regulate comfort and define boundaries.
In storage areas, they keep things accessible and protected.
In transitional spaces, they manage entry, movement, and flow.
Each object belongs somewhere.
Placement is part of its function.
What to expect from the objects
These objects are handmade and material-driven.
Variation is normal.
Surfaces may shift slightly in tone, shape, or texture.
They are not uniform.
They are built for use, not for display.
Materials age with time.
They respond to handling, washing, and daily life.
This is not imperfection.
It is how the object lives.
Objects in use
Objects are easier to choose when you understand where they fit.
Some are used daily.
Others remain in place and structure the space quietly.
Start with one piece that matches how you live.
Build from there if needed.
The role of structure
These objects are not isolated.
They connect materials, regions, and the people who make them.
They follow patterns shaped by climate, use, and continuity.
Understanding this structure makes selection simple.
You are not choosing randomly. You are placing something that already fits.
Make the decision simple
Start small or build gradually.
Each object is designed to work within the same logic.
You do not need to overthink combinations.
Choose based on use.
Everything else aligns naturally.







