








Barman Vase
Made from ash, this tapered vase features a fabulous contrast between the dark heartwood and light sapwood. Two cracks (stabilized and filled so they won’t expand) show that the tree endured some adversity during its life. But it survived and thrived nonetheless. The vase’s wide base ensures stability and it comes with a glass tube so it may be used with fresh as well as dried flowers/grasses.
Top Diameter: 2”
Maximum Diameter: 6”
Bottom Diameter: 4:
Height: 7-3/4”
As a child in India, Dr. Purnima Devi Barman was fascinated with greater adjutant storks, leading to her lifelong passion as a wildlife biologist. Fewer than 1200 of these storks exist today, less than 1% of their number a century ago. One major cause of the decline was destruction of their natural habitat. Barman founded the Hargila Army, an all-female conservation movement now comprising over 10,000 women, which protects nesting sites and rehabilitates injured storks to prevent these giant birds from going extinct.
Made from ash, this tapered vase features a fabulous contrast between the dark heartwood and light sapwood. Two cracks (stabilized and filled so they won’t expand) show that the tree endured some adversity during its life. But it survived and thrived nonetheless. The vase’s wide base ensures stability and it comes with a glass tube so it may be used with fresh as well as dried flowers/grasses.
Top Diameter: 2”
Maximum Diameter: 6”
Bottom Diameter: 4:
Height: 7-3/4”
As a child in India, Dr. Purnima Devi Barman was fascinated with greater adjutant storks, leading to her lifelong passion as a wildlife biologist. Fewer than 1200 of these storks exist today, less than 1% of their number a century ago. One major cause of the decline was destruction of their natural habitat. Barman founded the Hargila Army, an all-female conservation movement now comprising over 10,000 women, which protects nesting sites and rehabilitates injured storks to prevent these giant birds from going extinct.
Made from ash, this tapered vase features a fabulous contrast between the dark heartwood and light sapwood. Two cracks (stabilized and filled so they won’t expand) show that the tree endured some adversity during its life. But it survived and thrived nonetheless. The vase’s wide base ensures stability and it comes with a glass tube so it may be used with fresh as well as dried flowers/grasses.
Top Diameter: 2”
Maximum Diameter: 6”
Bottom Diameter: 4:
Height: 7-3/4”
As a child in India, Dr. Purnima Devi Barman was fascinated with greater adjutant storks, leading to her lifelong passion as a wildlife biologist. Fewer than 1200 of these storks exist today, less than 1% of their number a century ago. One major cause of the decline was destruction of their natural habitat. Barman founded the Hargila Army, an all-female conservation movement now comprising over 10,000 women, which protects nesting sites and rehabilitates injured storks to prevent these giant birds from going extinct.