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Mary Ratcliffe Studio’s Barrow Collection Finds Its Full Form

08.22.25 | By
Mary Ratcliffe Studio’s Barrow Collection Finds Its Full Form

When Toronto-based designer Mary Ratcliffe first introduced the Barrow Dining Table in 2021, she wasn’t simply launching a piece of furniture – she was seeding a language. Drawn from the centuries-old coopering technique of barrel-making, Barrow’s faceted curves and monolithic stance marry traditional woodworking with a contemporary sensibility. Now, with the launch of the full Barrow Collection, Ratcliffe expands that vocabulary into a complete suite comprising a bench, side tables, and mirror – each an artifact in its own right, bound together by the same sculptural syntax.

A minimalist black bench with a flat seat and two cylindrical legs, set against a light-colored wall and floor.

For Ratcliffe, coopering is more than a fabrication method; it’s a conversation with wood as a living material. By shaping repeated trapezoidal staves – or planks – into curved yet angular volumes, she builds both structure and establishes a rhythm with thoughtful repetition.

A close-up of a modern black wooden bench with a rounded base and smooth finish, placed on a light speckled floor near a white wall.

A large, smooth, black circular object is positioned in the lower left corner against a light, speckled concrete background.

“I wanted to take those traditional rules about how wood moves and lives,” she explains, “and give them a contemporary spin, simplify it to make them almost a meditation on shape.”

A minimalist dark wooden bench with rounded edges is positioned in an empty, light-filled room with white walls and a large window.

Oval wall mirror with black frame accents, reflecting a large window with vertical bars, mounted on a plain white wall above a light-colored floor.

That balance, somewhere between monumental and approachable, defines the collection’s softness while highlighting an aspect of brutalism oft misunderstood. In the Barrow Table, this takes the form of clustered or split bases, their angled cuts catching light and shadow in ways that make the massive appear weightless. The Barrow Bench shifts the table’s forms to the edges, revealing its precision from new angles, while a gentle six-degree contour in the seat offers unexpected comfort.

A large rectangular mirror with rounded edges is mounted on a white wall, featuring two geometric black decorative elements on its left side.

Two modern, round side tables with white tops and black cylindrical bases are placed next to each other on a plain, light-colored floor against a neutral wall.

The Barrow Side Tables, scaled down but still commanding, use cantilevered marble tops to create pockets of negative space resulting in visual pauses that lighten the composition. Offered individually, the nested pair provide even more play. Even the Barrow Mirror, framed in hand-polished aluminum and flanked by faceted wooden “claws,” carries forward the collection’s geometry, refracted into a more jewel-like, wall-bound form.

Two modern side tables with round, white marble tops and cylindrical black bases are placed next to each other on a light, speckled floor against a plain wall.

A small side table with a white, oval marble top and a cylindrical black wooden base featuring a vertical groove.

The technical journey to this point was anything but simple. Achieving Barrow’s signature angled cut – crisp, repeatable, and stable despite wood’s natural movement – took years of trial, custom jigs, and a final breakthrough that replaced solid sections with a veneered, hollow-core build. The result is a series that feels inevitable, yet was hard-won.

Two modern side tables with round white tops and cylindrical black bases are positioned next to each other on a light-colored floor against a plain wall.

A dark, oval-shaped wooden table with a sculptural, rounded base in a minimalist, light-filled room with white walls and a window.

The pieces are presented in blackened oak – a deliberate choice that strips away the distraction of grain, letting the collection’s ethereal qualities take center stage. Seen together, they read less like individual objects and more like pristine artifacts originating from the same imagined architectural site – remnants of a tradition that values weight, material honesty, conscientious construction, and the quiet drama of form. In Ratcliffe’s hands, brutalism isn’t cold; it’s a language of precision, patience, and craft, spoken with warmth.

Close-up of the edge of a round, dark-colored wooden table with a textured surface, set against a light, speckled background.

A modern, minimalist black dining table with a rounded rectangular top and two cylindrical pedestal bases, set in a bright, empty room with white walls and a light floor.

“We make these production pieces with the same care as one would with collectible designs, within that environment. We’re a small team,” she adds. “There’s probably one or two people who are taking your product from raw material to finished product. And there’s something special about that.”

A modern dining set with a black oval table, matching bench, small round side table with a white top, and an oval mirror on a white wall in a bright room.

A person stands beside modern black furniture, including an oval table, bench, and small side table, in a bright room with a wall mirror and large window.

Designer Marry Ratcliffe with the full Barrow Collection

To see this and more by the designer, visit maryratcliffe.studio.

Photography provided by Ryan McCoy.

With professional degrees in architecture and journalism, New York-based writer Joseph has a desire to make living beautifully accessible. His work seeks to enrich the lives of others with visual communication and storytelling through design. When not writing, he teaches visual communication, theory, and design.