In this editorial selection, Prittle Prattle News reviews five refined gestures chosen for how they quietly shape Diwali within India’s business and media circles.
There are gifts that carry sentiment. And then there are those that carry intent, unspoken but deeply considered. This Diwali, as corporate gifting moves from the expected to the exceptional, a handful of artefacts from Consortium Gifts signal a quieter form of celebration. Not festive excess, but private appreciation. These aren’t just objects, they’re gestures. Offered with care, chosen for a boardroom, a corner desk, a den, or a winter retreat.
Here is our review of the five most carefully designed pieces from the Boardroom series, chosen not for noise, but for how well they sit with stillness, conversation, and late-night clarity.
The Boardroom Dome Candle
At first glance, it’s easy to misread this as just another decorative piece. But once placed, on a stack of hardcover journals, beside an armchair, or at the far edge of a dark teak writing table, the Boardroom Dome Candle settles into the room without introducing itself.
Weighing in at 480 grams and cast in a rounded cement-finish shell, the candle contains natural soy wax and burns for 40-45 hours, offering a surprisingly slow melt and soft illumination. It’s unscented, which, contrary to expectation, works in its favour. There’s no forced lavender or holiday vanilla. Just the flicker of a flame and the ambient glow of concrete reflecting light.
I lit it at 8:15 p.m. on a quiet evening, the kind when no tasks remain, but the mind still turns. By midnight, it had carved a small circle of calm in the room. No wax spill. No flicker panic. Just the quiet consistency of light, soft enough to think, bold enough to notice.
The casing, in a way, is the real gift. Once the wax burns through, it can house keys, cufflinks, business cards, or a handful of notes left behind from a client lunch. It’s not flashy. It’s functional, long after the Diwali sweets are forgotten.
If there is someone in your circle who works late, reads quietly, or holds space for themselves in silence, this is the piece for them. It doesn’t demand attention. It simply stays.
The Boardroom Executive Golf Putting Set
Not every golf lover waits for the weekend. Some of us make time in the margins.
This putting set is designed for those moments. The wooden putter assembles in less than a minute. The target cup sits flat and stays in place. The weight of the balls is just enough to give feedback on each swing. You don’t need a course, just a hallway, a study, or an open stretch in the office.
I used it near a window, on a low-pile rug. It didn’t turn me into a better golfer overnight. But it helped me slow down. The repetition brought a rhythm that cleared the mental noise.
For anyone who misses the feel of grip and follow-through, this isn’t a gimmick. It’s a reminder that practice doesn’t need a scoreboard. It only needs a quiet space and a little time.
The Boardroom Poker Set
There’s a certain energy that only shows up when the chips hit the table. Not noise. Not celebration. Just focus. Friendly, quiet focus.
This poker set captures that tone perfectly. The clay chips have the right weight, not for show, but for feel. The cards come in crisp black decks, clean-cut and easy to shuffle without slipping. Inside the hard shell case, everything has a place. Nothing feels thrown in. The dealer chip rests exactly where it should.
What surprised me most wasn’t the build. It was the effect. We unpacked the set post-dinner. Within ten minutes, the conversation narrowed, the jokes got sharper, and the table became something more than a surface. It became the setting for memory.
There are louder ways to gift a game. This one doesn’t need to raise its voice. It just works. And that’s what makes it worth giving.
The Boardroom Bamboo Chess & Wine Tool Set
There are gifts that open, and then there are ones that unfold.
The Boardroom Bamboo Chess & Wine Tool Set arrives in a way that doesn’t announce its duality. At first glance, it appears to be a classic wooden chess box, bamboo-finished, brushed in subtle grain, with a weight that suggests it belongs near a study lamp or inside a club drawer. But lift the board, and what you find inside is unexpected: a full-bodied wine tool kit, concealed beneath the 64 squares.
Inside rest four essentials, a drip ring, wine pourer, stopper, and a corkscrew, all nestled into the carved grooves beneath the kings and pawns. It’s clever without being gimmicky, and elegant without being loud. The magnetic closure is clean, the pieces surprisingly firm in the hand.
I placed this set in the conference lounge on a Friday evening. By 6:45 p.m., a quiet game had begun, not over competition, but as a gesture. A bottle opened. Two glasses set. A discussion that had ended hours ago found a second wind. No grand reveals. No fuss.
What makes this gift notable isn’t just its form, it’s the fact that it serves two kinds of evenings: the ones where conversation flows without structure, and the ones where strategy takes over. It suits both, the thinker and the connoisseur.
There’s a reason chess has stayed through centuries, and wine through celebrations. Here, they meet without pretence.
The Boardroom Bamboo Wine Tool Set
Some gifts are used once. Others stay close to the cabinet, brought out on evenings that call for something quiet and well-made.
This wine tool set arrives in a compact bamboo case. It holds four essentials: a corkscrew, stopper, pourer, and drip ring. Each tool fits into its place without excess or display. The case shuts with a soft magnetic close. It doesn’t draw attention to itself. It simply does its job, and does it well.
I used it on a late Saturday evening. The pourer allowed for a slow, clean pour. The stopper sealed well enough to return to the bottle the next day. It felt precise, not flashy.
What stood out most wasn’t how it looked, but how little effort it took to use. No unnecessary grip. No struggling with packaging. It’s not something you buy to show. It’s something you keep because it works, and because it lasts.
A good glass of wine doesn’t need an audience. Neither does this.
Conclusion
A well-chosen gift doesn’t just honour a relationship, it marks time. It says, “we built something this year,” without the need for a card. Each piece in this review holds that intention. Whether it’s a flicker of candlelight on a desk, the click of chess pieces between meetings, or a wine case carried to an old friend’s home, these gestures don’t chase attention. They hold meaning.
They’re not here to impress a room. They’re meant for the one person who’s earned their place in yours.
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