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“One teak table that lasts 150 years creates a fraction of the waste of ten cheaper alternatives over the same period.”
Royal Nilambur
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Collection
Teak wood furniture from Royal Nilambur includes a curated range of mirrors framed in genuine Nilambur wild teak — slow-grown forest timber sourced legally from Kerala Forest Department depots. Each frame is made to order in our Nilambur workshop, with the same mortise and tenon construction and kiln-seasoned timber that goes into every piece we build. Three current designs, backed by a 10-year warranty, and available in custom dimensions.
Every piece is made to order
Handcrafted in Nilambur · 10-year structural warranty · Free delivery across South India
Teak wood furniture encompasses far more than tables and beds — the frame around a mirror is one of the most-handled, most-noticed pieces in any home, and in genuine Nilambur wild teak it acquires a presence that no painted MDF or veneered softwood frame ever will. Royal Nilambur's mirror collection is small by design: three considered pieces, each made to order in our Nilambur workshop from Kerala wild teak sourced directly from Forest Department timber depots in Malappuram district. If you have been searching for original teak wood furniture that extends to every corner of a room, this is where that standard holds.
Most mirror frames — even expensive ones — are made from materials chosen for their ability to be painted or gilded, not for their inherent beauty. Wild teak from Nilambur needs neither. The honey-brown grain, tighter than any plantation-grown timber, deepens with age rather than fading. It is a frame that looks better in ten years than it does today. For a piece that hangs at eye level, in a room where it will be seen daily, that matters. Kerala wooden furniture has a long history of using teak precisely where permanence and appearance need to coexist — a mirror frame is one of the most fitting applications.
Every mirror frame in this collection is built to the same structural standard as our furniture — because in our workshop, there is no lower category of work.
There are many brands that invoke Kerala or teak in their names without either the sourcing credentials or the workshop to justify it. Royal Nilambur buys timber exclusively from Kerala Forest Department regulated depots — every log is traceable to a legal forest harvest, not a plantation or an unregulated timber yard. Our craftsmen work in Nilambur, in a region with a 150-year teak forestry legacy, where the knowledge of how to read and work this specific timber is generational. When you buy a Royal Nilambur mirror, you are buying a made-to-order piece from furniture manufacturers in Kerala who have no interest in cutting corners on a three-piece collection. A 10-year warranty on a mirror frame is only possible when you are confident in both the material and the making.
The difference between nilambur teak wood furniture and plantation teak is not a matter of marketing — it is measurable in the wood itself. Wild teak growing in Kerala's monsoon forests takes three to four times longer to reach harvestable size than open-plot plantation teak. That slower growth produces annual rings so close together that the wood is noticeably denser and harder. For a mirror frame, this means sharper routed profiles that hold their edge over time, and a surface that resists the minor knocks and humidity fluctuations of daily use. The natural oil content — significantly higher in Nilambur wild teak than in plantation-grown equivalents — also means the timber does not dry out and crack in air-conditioned interiors, a common failure mode for mirror frames in Bangalore homes where the AC runs year-round.
A mirror frame is often the last piece of a room to be chosen, which means it is also the piece most often bought in haste. A few things worth considering before you decide:
As a starting point, a mirror hung above a console or sideboard should be roughly two-thirds the width of the surface below it. For a full-length dressing mirror, the minimum practical height is 150 cm for someone of average height — taller is better if ceiling clearance allows. Because Royal Nilambur makes to order, you are not constrained to catalogue sizes. Specify your wall dimensions and we will advise on frame width proportions to suit.
Frame weight is worth noting for large mirrors: a solid wild teak frame with substantial glass is a heavy piece. Ensure your wall fixing is into a masonry surface or into studs — not just plasterboard. Our team can advise on approximate weights for specific sizes before you order.
On maintenance: wild teak frames require almost none. An occasional wipe with a lightly oiled cloth — two or three times a year — is all that is needed to keep the grain nourished. Avoid silicone-based polishes; they seal the surface and prevent the natural patination that makes aged teak so distinctive.
Nilambur wild teak is slow-grown forest timber from Kerala's natural forests, producing a denser, harder wood with significantly higher natural oil content than plantation teak grown in open plots. Plantation teak is harvested in 15–20 years; wild teak in Nilambur's forests grows over 60–80 years. The difference shows in the tightness of the grain, the hardness of the surface, and the timber's inherent resistance to moisture and dimensional change.
The honest answer depends on your time horizon. A teak wood mirror frame from Royal Nilambur is more expensive upfront than a painted timber or MDF-core frame. But it will not warp, the finish will not peel, and the frame will look better at fifteen years than at one. If you are furnishing a home you intend to keep, the cost per year of a piece that lasts thirty years is lower than three or four replacement pieces over the same period.
Properly kiln-seasoned wild teak, with mortise and tenon joinery, will remain structurally sound and visually appealing for several decades under normal indoor conditions. The natural oil content protects the timber from the humidity swings that crack or warp lesser woods. Our 10-year warranty covers structural defects — but in practice, a well-made wild teak frame has a lifespan that far exceeds that.
Yes. Because every piece is made to order in our Nilambur workshop, frame dimensions — including overall mirror size, frame width, and profile depth — can be specified to your requirements. Lead time is 4–6 weeks from order confirmation. Contact us with your wall dimensions and we will guide you through the options.
Very little upkeep is needed. Dust the frame regularly and apply a small amount of teak oil or raw linseed oil two or three times a year using a soft cloth. This nourishes the grain and maintains the deep honey tone. Avoid water pooling on the frame surface — wipe dry if splashed. No sanding or refinishing is required under normal use for many years.
Royal Nilambur makes a small number of things well, in genuine Nilambur wood, in a workshop that has been working this specific timber for decades. Our mirror collection is not a catalogue of dozens — it is three considered pieces, made to order, made to be permanent fixtures in homes that have no interest in replacing them. If you are looking to buy authentic teak wood furniture in a category where most of the market has long since abandoned real timber, you are in the right place. Speak to our team about dimensions, and we will make it to yours.