












Plus Shelving System: 12" Maple
Most shelving hardware tries to disappear. The Plus Shelving System is modular wall storage built to be seen — brackets in four powder-coated colors turn a structural necessity into a visible, deliberate line across the wall. Solid maple shelves install individually or in continuous runs that follow the geometry of a room; a peg system organizes books and objects vertically instead of laying everything flat.
Buy shelves and brackets together, or brackets alone to expand an existing run. Installation requires only basic tools.
Prices include shipping within the continental US.
Also available in other woods and sizes — see the full Plus Shelving System line.
Designed by Brooklyn-based Steven Gertner, who brings his grandparents’ hardware shop background together with training from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design. "The Plus pieces are not engineered to disappear into anonymous bits of hardware," Gertner says. "They are designed to have their own presence, point of view, and, hopefully, beauty."
Original: $175.00
-65%$175.00
$61.25Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Most shelving hardware tries to disappear. The Plus Shelving System is modular wall storage built to be seen — brackets in four powder-coated colors turn a structural necessity into a visible, deliberate line across the wall. Solid maple shelves install individually or in continuous runs that follow the geometry of a room; a peg system organizes books and objects vertically instead of laying everything flat.
Buy shelves and brackets together, or brackets alone to expand an existing run. Installation requires only basic tools.
Prices include shipping within the continental US.
Also available in other woods and sizes — see the full Plus Shelving System line.
Designed by Brooklyn-based Steven Gertner, who brings his grandparents’ hardware shop background together with training from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design. "The Plus pieces are not engineered to disappear into anonymous bits of hardware," Gertner says. "They are designed to have their own presence, point of view, and, hopefully, beauty."























