Father's Day Collection
This Father’s Day, we present a variety of gifts as diverse as dads themselves: the animal lover or green-thumbed dads, for the bar, for the desk and more.
This Father’s Day, we present a variety of gifts as diverse as dads themselves: the animal lover or green-thumbed dads, for the bar, for the desk and more.
Father’s Day is June 21st. Add a touch of whimsy to offices, studies, and man caves everywhere with our decoupage pieces for all kinds of dads.
John has carved a niche in antique woodwork and stocked the shop with unique creations from around the world. Early 20th-century tramp art, carved from layered scraps of wood, meticulously notched and stacked into geometric, chip-carved patterns, includes boxes, frames, mirrors, tables, storage, and even a bird cage. These pieces reflect the tramp art movement’s resourcefulness and quiet devotion to ornament, transforming humble materials into personal objects.
John has set our hearts aflutter with his butterfly collection. A kaleidoscope (a common name for a group of butterflies!) drifts through the shop, settling on a variety of hand-picked and hand-crafted items.
Enjoy the scenery: Our collection of landscape, seascape, and still life paintings is ready to explore. Among the selection are early 20th-century Dutch pastoral landscapes by Evert Rabbers and Alphonse Baril’s mid-19th-century detailed watercolors of the French countryside. Bouquets abound in still-life paintings from Holland and in oils and linocut prints by Hugo Guinness. Take the scenic route here.
John made his own deck of cards based on a set of French transformation cards called Jeanne Hachette, circa 1870, by Grimaud.
Dreaming in Color: Here’s a sneak peek at the John Derian Colouring Book: Flowers. Available for pre-order where books are sold. Available on our site, and in our shops on June 30th, 2026.
This year marks the 30th anniversary of John’s first shop in New York. A few years after starting his one-man decoupage design business in Boston, he moved to New York in the early 1990s. As orders increased, he hired a team of artisans to craft his motifs and opened his first shop in 1995 on 2nd Street in the East Village... a quiet block that would soon become his creative hub.

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