






A Hundred Small Hills Sofa
Estimated delivery timelines are displayed on individual product pages and are provided in good faith.
Delivery timeframes may vary due to, but not limited to:
- Production Schedules
- Supplier Timelines
- Quality Control Processes
- Customs Clearance
- Carrier Availability
- External or force-majeure events beyond our control
All delivery dates are estimates only and are not guaranteed delivery dates.
Production Timeline for Extra Large Items: 12 to 18 Business Days
General delivery guidance (post-production):
- Extra-large or oversized items: approx. 4–7 weeks
Customers may contact us at any time for an update on order status.
For more details head to our Shipping Policy
Made-to-Order & Project Items:
Many Panache Artistry products are made to order (look for the TAG on the product page), including items that are:
- manufactured specifically after an order is placed
- produced as part of a batch or project run
- not held as finished stock
For such items:
- production typically begins shortly after order confirmation
- orders may be subject to cancellation restrictions once production has commenced, in accordance with our Returns & Cancellations Policy and your statutory rights
- delivery timelines may change due to production or logistics factors
Made-to-order and project items are supplied in accordance with our Returns & Cancellations Policy and your statutory rights.
Some surfaces are decorated. This one has topography. Every inch of the seat and back rises and falls in tight, repeating folds, dense enough that the eye reads hills before it reads upholstery. The leather is buffalo hide, hand-burnished in the workshops of Jodhpur until the honey tone shifts with each fold, darker in the hollows, catching light along every ridge. The frame beneath stays plain and square, almost severe, so the tufting carries the whole piece on its own, no scroll, no nailhead, nothing else asking to be noticed. Set against a bare plaster wall or a poured-concrete floor, its surface becomes the room's only texture worth lingering on. In a Mayfair study, or a Chelsea room built around one good chair and not much else, it holds the eye the way real terrain does, not all at once, but fold by fold.





