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A Gardener & Son Imprint — Est. 2025

Heirloom.

Vintage garden ornaments, tools, and vessels. Things worth keeping — for the garden, the table outside, and the life lived around them.

Objects that reward attention — tools and forms meant to be used, worn in, repaired, and kept.

If something is too precious to be used, it does not belong here.

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9 objects
The index

Selected objects.

Available
Bluestone — c. 1960s

Bluestone Birdbath

Stone — Water

Still water in the open garden. Over time it gathers leaf fall, insects, and reflection.

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3 remaining

Wide Terracotta Vessel

Terracotta — Vessel

An unglazed vessel that breathes with the season. It ages in the same direction as the garden.

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Available

Forged Trowel

Carbon Steel & Timber — Tool

Made to last a working life. The handle wears to the hand.

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Archive
Found — pre-war

Basalt Water Stone

Basalt — Water

Rain gathers in the hollow. It has done this for longer than the garden exists.

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Available

Reclaimed Timber Bench

Recycled Ironbark — Seating

Milled from old-growth timber already lived in. Each board carries a prior use.

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Limited
Cast iron — c. 1940s

Cast Iron Water Tray

Cast Iron — Water

Flat and heavy. Rust comes with time and makes it more itself.

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Available
Terracotta — hand thrown

Tall Neck Vessel

Terracotta — Vessel

Thrown tall. The neck suits a single stem, a slow grass, a moment of restraint.

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Available
Bluestone — single slab

Bluestone Slab Seat

Bluestone — Seating

A single slab. No joins. It will be in this garden long after most other things have gone.

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Available

Hori Hori Knife

Carbon Steel & Walnut — Tool

Half knife, half trowel. Once you have used one, nothing else feels adequate.

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Some objects arrive already carrying time.

Their surfaces hold weather, use, and repair. Nothing here is pristine. Nothing needs to be.

On objects

Vintage garden objects carry something that new ones cannot.

They hold the memory of other gardens, other hands. The nostalgia they carry is not sentiment — it is evidence of durability.

We choose objects that reward attention — tools and forms meant to be used, worn in, repaired, and kept. If something is too precious to be used, it does not belong here.

On vessels and forms

The vessels in the studio were shaped decades ago.

Some more than a century past. Their surfaces hold weather, use, and repair.

Nothing here is pristine. Nothing needs to be.

Time as material

Time is the primary material in these forms.

Long exposure has softened edges and revealed structure. These vessels have already proven their durability through use.

Newness would add nothing.

"Newness would add nothing."
On objects

Things made to outlast their moment.

An heirloom is not a category. It is a quality — the quality of having been made with enough care that time improves rather than diminishes it.

"Use it. Leave it in the rain. It will be fine."

We do not collect objects for novelty. We look for material honesty — the kind that reveals itself over years of use. The way terracotta takes on a patina of salt and moss. The way cast iron rusts into something more beautiful than it began.

Longevity is the first criterion. An object that lasts a generation becomes part of the garden's history. Heirloom is our attempt to find and hold the ones that qualify.

Collections

Curated groupings.

Water

Objects that hold, carry, and offer water.

Vessels

Terracotta, stone, ceramic — for planting and display.

Carrying time

Objects already shaped by decades of use.

Tools

Forged, fitted, made for decades of use.

From the studio of Gardener & Son.

Designing ecological gardens across Melbourne — the studio works with long-horizon thinking and a belief that gardens should be built to last. Heirloom is the material expression of that practice.

Heirloom is a Gardener & Son imprint. We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live — the Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung people of the Kulin Nation — and pay our respects to their Elders past and present. We recognise that this land was never ceded and that the deep knowledge of Country held by its First Peoples is the longest and most enduring record of how to live well within it.

Stone — Water — Bluestone

Bluestone Birdbath.

Status
Available
Origin

Central Victoria

Quarried from a working bluestone site near Castlemaine.

Circa

1960s

Made for a garden in Kew. Acquired from the estate.

Years in use

60+

Surface carries lichen and edge wear from six decades of weather.

Condition

Working

Nothing here is pristine. Nothing needs to be.

This vessel holds water quietly. Over time, it gathers leaf fall, insects, and reflection. It becomes part of the garden's rhythm — a fixed point around which everything else moves.

The basin was cut from a single piece of bluestone and ground shallow across its face. That original work is still visible, barely — the tool marks softened now by sixty years of weather and use.

In the first weeks it will hold rain cleanly. By the second season, a thin film of algae will form at the margins. This is not deterioration. It is the stone becoming part of the garden's biology. The water becomes habitat. The stone becomes more itself.

It sits best in partial shade — under the canopy of a tall tree, or at the edge of a planted border. Not in full sun, where the water evaporates too quickly and the stone bleaches pale.

MaterialBluestone (basalt)
Dimensions450 × 450 × 80 mm
WeightApprox. 24 kg
SurfaceLichen colonies, edge wear — unrestored
PlacementPartial shade, ground or plinth
CareRinse monthly. Allow algae at margins — it belongs there.

In the garden.

Water

Provides standing water for birds and insects throughout the year.

Surface life

Lichen and moss colonies established over decades. The stone supports life beyond its primary use.

Microclimate

Evaporating water provides mild cooling in exposed positions.

Ground

Overflow carries moisture and organic material to surrounding soil.

Presence

A still point. Birds bring daily, unscheduled attention to the space.

$480

Delivery available. Installation by arrangement.

Terracotta — Vessel — Unglazed

Wide Terracotta Vessel.

Status
3 remaining
Made by

Family workshop

Three generations working the same clay in northern Portugal.

Method

Hand thrown

Each piece varies slightly in dimension and surface character.

Surface

Unglazed

The porosity is the function. Do not seal it.

Character

Salt & moss

Will mark and mottle with use. This is expected and correct.

This is an unglazed vessel. It breathes. Moisture moves through its walls throughout the day, cooling the root zone of whatever grows inside. In summer this can be the difference between a plant that holds and one that doesn't.

The form is wide-shouldered and low. The opening is generous enough for a proper soil volume, deep enough for real roots.

Over time, the exterior will mark. Salt deposits appear around the lower rim where water wicks and evaporates. Moss establishes in sheltered positions. The vessel ages in the same direction as the garden — darkening, softening, accumulating. This is not a fault. It is the point.

Made in Portugal by a family workshop that has worked with this clay for three generations. Each piece varies slightly. None of them are wrong.

MaterialUnglazed terracotta
DimensionsØ 380 × H 280 mm
DrainageSingle aperture, 20 mm
OriginMade in Portugal
CareFrost-free in winter. Do not seal.

$195

Three available. Delivery to Melbourne metro included.

Carbon Steel & Timber — Tool

Forged Trowel.

Status
Available
Made by

Sheffield smith

Thirty years of tool making in the same workshop.

Method

Drop forged

Single piece of carbon steel. No welds, no seams.

Handle

Seasoned walnut

Will darken and wear to the shape of the hand.

Repairability

Full

The handle can be replaced. This is by design.

Forged from a single piece of carbon steel, fitted with a seasoned walnut handle. It is heavier than the hardware store version. This is not incidental — the weight does the work.

The blade is narrow enough to plant seedlings without disturbing roots, wide enough to move soil with purpose. Over years of use, the metal develops a patina. The handle wears to the hand.

When the handle eventually needs replacing, it can be replaced. This is by design.

MaterialCarbon steel, walnut
Length310 mm overall
OriginSheffield, England
CareWipe clean. Oil handle annually.

$145

Posted carefully. Arrives ready to use.

Recycled Ironbark — Seating

Reclaimed Timber Bench.

Status
Available
Timber

Old-growth ironbark

Recovered from demolition in country Victoria.

Prior life

Rural structure

Nail holes, surface marks, and grain shifts from decades of weather.

Each bench

Individual

Made from available timber. No two are identical.

Time in service

80–100 yr

The timber's first life. Now beginning its second.

Milled from old-growth ironbark recovered from a demolition site. Each board carries a prior use — nail holes, surface marks, the occasional deep grain shift from decades of weather. None of this has been sanded away.

The bench is simple in form. Two boards on two legs. No joins that will fail, no finish that will peel. Left outside, the ironbark will silver. Oiled, it holds its warmth. Either way, it will be fine.

This timber has already proven its durability through use. Newness would add nothing.

MaterialRecycled ironbark
DimensionsApprox. 1800 × 300 × 440 mm H
OriginCountry Victoria demolition
Lead time3–4 weeks, made to order
CareOil once a year if you like. Leave it if you don't.

$680

Each bench made individually. 3–4 weeks from enquiry.