Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping FREE SHIPPING CANADA WIDE - PURCHASES OVER $500

Your Cart At Grays 0

Sorry, looks like we don't have enough of this product.

Pair with
Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping You are $500.00 CAD away from free shipping.

U.S. customers: For questions about shipping or import fees, please email hello@graystoronto.com prior to placing your order.

Subtotal Free
View cart
Shipping, taxes, and discount codes are calculated at checkout

Your Cart is Empty

Roof Tile Curve Incense Holder

Regular price $150.00 CAD
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Color Indigo
Curved ceramic incense holder designed as a modern interpretation of traditional Korean roof tile forms.

Manufacturing support by Tajimi Custom Tiles, a bespoke tile manufacturer catering to global architects and designers, located in Gifu, Japan.

Designed to be used with any scent from our collection of fine, artisanal incense.
INDIGO an exceptionally unique, mottled glaze made up of various indigo tones on a base of deep, earthy brown. Top and ends feature a high-gloss finish. Sides are a matte textured brown with glossy glaze drip detail. Bottom of tile is a contrasting, raw, unglazed clay.

Made in Japan.

You can use product metafields to assign content to this tab that is unique to an individual product. Use tabs to highlight unique features, sizing information, or other sales information.

Binu Binu

BINU BINU is a brand of modern soaps, incense, and bath accessories inspired by the ritual of the Korean public bath, a place free of vanity and inhibition where generations are brought together in the simple act of cleansing.

A collection inspired by traditional Korean roof tiles. One style is a decorative roof tile end, and the other is the complementary curved roof tile. Together, they represent the distinct shapes that have provided cover to houses, temples, and various public spaces in East Asia for thousands of years.

This collection speaks to the architecture of public bathhouses and residential bathrooms through the use of the tile form; an individual tile turns into an object that references a history of public and private spaces, both traditional and present-day.