'Mandap' Pillar Candle Holder Set of 2 in Wood
If you find the same item listed at a lower price (including delivery) elsewhere, we'll match it for you.
How it works
- Send a screenshot of the item from the other website with date and time visible.
- Send us the link of the item on Brahm and on the other website.
- We'll check that it's the same item from the same seller.
- If eligible, Brahm matches the price.
Etymology
In Your Home
Care
Provenance
These pillar candle holders are made in the North Indian decorative woodcraft tradition: cylindrical forms turned on a lathe, their surfaces printed with patterned ornament, fitted with metal ring handles. The pairing of turned wood with surface-printed decoration is characteristic of workshops across Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, where the vocabulary of India's older decorative traditions — miniature painting, textile design, carpet-making — is translated into contemporary domestic objects.
The mandap is the open, columned pavilion that appears across Indian architectural and ritual life: the marriage mandap, the temple antechamber, the Mughal garden pavilion. It is defined by its openness — pillared on all sides, receiving light from every direction, the space of ceremony and gathering. These paired holders carry that logic: two uprights defining a space between them, the flame held at the centre, the object built for the occasion of people gathering around light.
Disclaimer
- These holders are handcrafted in wood with a printed surface. Variations in tone and colour are a natural feature of the process.
- Minor differences in print registration or surface texture should be understood as the signature of individual craft, not a defect.
Choose options
















Email