A compact record player and speaker combo built like furniture. Walnut or oak, $2,800, ships in six weeks.
May 14. Wrensilva released the Studio, a turntable-and-speaker console half the size of the brand's flagship models. Designed to fit on a shelf or sideboard, the piece measures 22 inches wide and houses a belt-drive turntable, Class D amplifier, and two full-range speakers in a single cabinet. Walnut or white oak, hand-finished in San Diego. $2,800, ships in six weeks.
The brand is known for building large-format consoles that sit on the floor and cost $8,000 and up. The Studio shrinks the form factor without changing the construction approach. The cabinet is solid hardwood with hand-rubbed oil finish. The turntable deck is a Pro-Ject Essential III with Ortofon cartridge. The amplifier runs 50 watts per channel and drives two 4-inch woofers and two 1-inch tweeters mounted behind a fabric grille. No Bluetooth, no USB, no wireless streaming. Just the turntable, the preamp, and a single auxiliary input on the back.
The design reads as mid-century furniture with a record player built in. The top is flat, the corners are chamfered, the legs are tapered. The knobs are aluminum with knurled edges. The dust cover is acrylic and lifts off entirely rather than hinging. The whole piece weighs 35 pounds, light enough to move but heavy enough to stay planted when the needle drops.
Wrensilva's larger consoles occupy a niche between high-end audio and high-end furniture. The Studio slots into the same category at a lower price point. Still expensive for a turntable. Still built like a piece of furniture. The bet is that the form factor matters as much as the sound, and that a smaller console fits into more rooms than a floor-standing one.
The Studio lands in a crowded space. Pro-Ject, Music Hall, and U-Turn all sell turntables in the $500 to $1,200 range. Sonos and KEF sell powered speakers that stream and connect. The Studio offers neither the price of the first group nor the connectivity of the second. What it offers is the object itself: a single piece of furniture that plays records and looks good doing it. Whether that's worth $2,800 is a question of how much the cabinet matters to the buyer.
Available now on Wrensilva's site. Six-week lead time. Walnut or white oak. No finish options, no customization. The piece is what it is.
A Brooklyn studio rolls out a handmade line where door pulls look like they belong on a plinth, not a frame.
dispatchA $49 steel shelf and a $12 tee in the same collection. Dezeen's asking if budget design just raised the floor.
dispatchHelen & Hard architects apply boat-building technique to timber cabin on Randaberg coast. Hand-sawn planks, zero metal fasteners.