Five luxe home objects for collectors who already have everything
These five display-first home objects are built for the person who owns everything, from a railway-inspired clock to a brass fireplace and a tiny solar system.

Finding a gift for someone who already has everything is really a test of placement: the object has to earn its corner of the room, not just its box. The clearest proof is Goofball’s Perch Clock, whose Batch 02 sold out in 10 minutes, a pace that says as much about collector appetite as it does about the design. The best pieces here have visible presence, tactile materials, and a reason to stay out on the wall, shelf, or table long after the wrapping paper is gone.
Perch Double-Sided Wall Clock
The Perch Clock is the smartest kind of wall object because it refuses to sit flat and disappear. Turin-based Goofball revived the double-sided clock format once associated with railway stations and institutional corridors in Europe, then recast it for corners, hallways, and rooms seen from multiple angles. At $175, with two AA batteries, a simple wall bracket, and three color options, it feels like a small architectural gesture rather than a gadget, which is exactly why it belongs on a hallway wall or at the end of a pass-through space.
Harmony Flame Fireplace
The Harmony Flame Fireplace is for the host who understands that a flame changes a room faster than any lamp ever could. Crafted in brass using the same techniques applied to musical instruments, it burns eco-friendly bioethanol, uses real fire rather than LEDs, and needs no installation, no flue, and no gas line, which keeps the romance intact without turning the object into a building project. At $239, it belongs on a dining table or a low console where its reflections can do half the work.
Perpetual Orrery Kinetic Art
If the first two pieces change how a room reads, the Perpetual Orrery changes how time itself feels on a desk. Built in brass, steel, and acrylic, and modeled on an 18th-century European Grand Orrery, it recreates planetary motion with the precision of a watchmaker, down to lunar phases, Neptune’s 10-year crawl, and a comet on a 33-year cycle. At $450, it is the most substantial spend in the group, but the point is less price than spectacle: this is the object you put on a shelf or worktable when you want the room to reward a second look.
Jewel Vase Mirror Stand
The Jewel Vase Mirror Stand is the sort of hybrid that makes a collector smile because it solves two problems without looking like a compromise. It doubles as an accessory stand and a vase, uses bioplastic with a large amount of rice husks, and comes in white, green, and brown, so it has the matte, natural finish that photographs beautifully on a desk, table, or shelf. At $59, it is proof that a gift does not need to be expensive to look intentional, especially when the polyhedral shape catches the light like a tiny object d’art.
Statement Floral Bud Vase
The Statement Floral Bud Vase is the quietest piece here, and that is its appeal. Made of metal, carefully weighted at the center, and supplied with an adapter for thinner stems, it lets a single flower or stem read like a deliberate composition rather than an afterthought. At $39 to $40 depending on the listing, it is the rare small gift that looks more considered than costly, and it belongs on a coffee table, bedside surface, or narrow console where one stem can do all the talking.
Together, these objects make a persuasive case for a different kind of luxury gift: one that earns a permanent styling moment, keeps its tactile appeal up close, and still feels special after the ribbon is gone.
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