Curated home goods — Green Valley, Arizona

Heirlooms for the slow-built home a small house of vessels, woven things, & quiet textiles

Megaselect is a curation house. We work with potters, weavers, and small workrooms across the desert West to bring forward objects that age into a home rather than out of it.

View the Spring Edit How we curate

House
Megaselect LLC
Green Valley, Arizona
Edits per year
Four releases
plus archive drops
Trade access
Wholesale & design
by application
Plate I — The South Window Room

The objects we carry have weight, grain, and a maker's mark. We buy small, ship slow, and trade in pieces that earn a place at the table.

Megaselect began in a converted cinder-block studio in Green Valley, an hour south of Tucson. The mission has been the same since the first edit: source quietly, write honest copy, never carry a piece we would not place in our own home.

Each season we release a tight assortment — usually fewer than thirty pieces — with full provenance and a written field note for each maker. Pieces age. Stains and patina belong on a working object. We restock when we can; archive editions are gone when the last one ships.

We do not chase trend, and we do not overprint. The studio is a working room first and a storefront second. If you are reading this from a project deck or buyer office, we would rather speak with you than sell to you.

Field notes

Stories from the workrooms

We file a short piece each month from a maker's bench, dye room, or kiln. No brand voice, no marketing layer — just a working note.

The kiln week at Larkwood

Six potters, one wood-fired kiln in central Oregon. The notes from the firing log become the next collection.

A loom in a barn

Reading a 19th-century counterbalance loom in flat afternoon light.

Saguaro rib, bear grass, sweetgrass

Notes on the materials we accept and the ones we walk away from.

Open studio, by appointment

The Green Valley room is open for trade, designers, and stockists by appointment only.

“A house full of finished things is a house that is finished with you. Build it slowly — one bowl, one cloth, one rug at a time.” From the studio, Spring 2026