Mirrors & Decor.
Light multipliers and finishing moves: statement wall mirrors, floor mirrors, and the decorative objects that make shelves look intentional. Caracole and Costantini Pietro both contribute.
26 pieces
A mirror is the cheapest window you can buy — hang it where it reflects light or a view, not the side of the refrigerator. Over a console or buffet, keep the mirror narrower than the furniture and 6–10" above it. Floor mirrors lean at a wall-saving angle and make small bedrooms feel double.
Costantini's mirrors carry the same Italian frame-craft as its tables; Caracole's run from quiet to baroque-modern. Decorative objects here are chosen the way our studio styles rooms — fewer, larger, heavier pieces over shelf clutter.
This is also the natural home for custom requests: our shop forges mirror frames and steel decor to drawings — a hand-forged frame around a simple mirror is a signature D'Hierro detail.
What the range looks like
Twenty-eight mirrors and decor pieces from about $550 to $6,500 — sculptural Caracole frames plus Costantini's frame-craft mirrors. A mirror from the same collection as your casegoods carries its finish up the wall, which is the quiet way to make a room feel designed rather than bought.
The hands behind these rooms also forge the architecture — entry doors, steel window walls, stair railings — and our own forged-iron furniture. One Dallas shop; renovating and furnishing happen here together.