__ of Light & Legacy

The Chand Uruli is imagined as a vessel of lunar ritual — a sacred container cradle to ceremonies where the moon’s quiet grace transforms function into ceremony. Each uruli evokes the cyclical dance of light and shadow, of night yielding to dawn.

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Rendered entirely by hand, these urulis are beatened and hand spun in Pune by Master Tambat artisans, while the stone alter dishes are handcarved by Mahabalipuram sculptors whose lineage stretches back through centuries of temple craftsmanship.

Guided by hands that learned their rhythm from stone itself, they coax elegant curves from granite, then align them with copper overlays that arc like moonbeams.

A round copper box with a copper handle on top of a green marble dish on a beige background

Vessels for Ceremony, Echoes of the Moon

The Chand Uruli is more than a vessel — it is a lunar altar. In its form, it carries the quiet shimmer of moonlight on water, the pause between breaths in twilight. It is meant for ceremonies of introspection, for offerings bathed in dew, for rituals where silence is honored. Through granite’s permanence and copper’s glow, it fuses ritual, material, and memory.

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“Each uruli is a fragment of moonlight, carved in stone and framed in copper — a quiet invitation to ritual.”

Two marble concave dishes facing each other with a copper bowl insert and a copper dish on top on a wooden surface with warm lighting