The Guest Cottage

High in the limbs of an ancient oak is the estate’s most curious dwelling.
Some say it was built as a folly; others insist it was punishment for a carpenter who lost a bet.
No one agrees on its origin, but everyone agrees it is rarely empty.

Lantern light glows in the windows, the rope bridge creaks at odd hours, and once, someone swore they saw smoke rise from the chimney on a clear summer night.

Guests arrive without invitation.
They never knock.

One day the Cottage is still, the next it’s very much alive — an astrologer setting her charts by candlelight, a botanist pressing ferns between the pages of our ledgers, a sailor stringing a hammock where no hammock should be.

They stay long enough to eat our bread, tell stories (true or otherwise), and leave behind a small batch of wares as payment.
Pearls, potions, tonics, soap.

Each month it’s something different.
Each month, just enough for those who happen to be here when the Guest Cottage is occupied.

When the shelves are cleared, the guest vanishes, and the Cottage waits again, swaying slightly in the trees, as though nothing ever happened at all.

June at the Guest Cottage

Kindred arrived in June under circumstances that can best be described as inevitable.
There was no formal announcement. No committee was convened. No permission was sought. One morning a procession of trunks appeared at the Guest Cottage, followed by crates of amber glass, bundles of dried botanicals, handwritten ledgers, and a quantity of ribbon that raised several questions from the household staff.
By the end of the week, the matter was settled.
The cottage windows now glow well into the evening hours. Shelves once occupied by gardening manuals and forgotten correspondence have been claimed by rows of hand-filled bottles bearing gold seals and familiar formulations. The air carries notes of rosehip, lavender, tamanu, and the faint confidence of a remedy that has already proven itself.
Visitors continue to arrive with concerns both practical and dramatic: weathered skin, winter-worn complexions, mysterious redness, regrettable sun exposure, and the occasional conviction that everything has gone terribly wrong. They leave carrying parcels wrapped in tissue and the distinct impression that perhaps everything will be fine after all.
The formulations remain precisely as they have always been. Each bottle is still filled by hand. Each order is prepared with the same care, attention, and occasional stubbornness that built Kindred in the first place.
Only the address has changed.
The Apothecary now resides at Stags Head Retreat, where it seems entirely at home.
The Estate is delighted by the arrangement.
Read about Kindred here...
Anna has arrived · The orchard is being assessed · Packages are arriving unmarked · The weather station is hers · The quinces will require a conversation ·
DRIFT — Eau de Parfum
DRIFT — Eau de Parfum
DRIFT — Eau de Parfum

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German Weather Station
German Weather Station

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How You Doin Honey? Notecards
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Estate Sachet Collection
Estate Sachet Collection
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Chalet Clock
Chalet Clock

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The Stag’s Vigil Candle
The Stag’s Vigil Candle
The Stag’s Vigil Candle

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DRIFT — Eau de Parfum
DRIFT — Eau de Parfum
DRIFT — Eau de Parfum

Sold Out

Estate Sachet Collection
Estate Sachet Collection
Estate Sachet Collection

$30.00

German Weather Station
German Weather Station

$87.00

Chalet Clock
Chalet Clock

$100.00

How You Doin Honey? Notecards
How You Doin Honey? Notecards
How You Doin Honey? Notecards

$24.00

The Stag’s Vigil Candle
The Stag’s Vigil Candle
The Stag’s Vigil Candle

$40.00