Shop Natural Stone Sinks by Shape — Rectangular, Round, Apron Front, Trough, Corner & Specialty
Find Your Shape
The shape of a sink does more than fill a cutout in a counter. It defines how the sink works, how it looks, and how it fits into the rhythm of the room around it. A clean rectangular basin reads modern and minimal. A soft round vessel feels classical and sculptural. An apron-front farmhouse sink anchors a traditional kitchen with the kind of presence engineered fixtures simply can't match. The right shape isn't about preference alone — it's about how a sink fits into your space, your countertop, your design vision, and the way you actually use the room.
Our hand-carved natural stone sinks come in six distinct shape families, each suited to specific applications, design styles, and spatial constraints. Below, we walk through what makes each shape different — and how to choose the silhouette that turns one of the most-used surfaces in your home into one of the most considered.
Rectangular & Square — Clean Lines, Endless Versatility
Rectangular and square sinks are the most versatile shape in the collection. The clean, geometric silhouette fits naturally into nearly any design style — from modern and minimalist to transitional and traditional — and pairs cleanly with both contemporary and classic countertops.
In bathrooms, rectangular vessel sinks deliver a refined, hotel-like aesthetic, while undermount rectangular sinks slide neatly beneath stone or wood vanities for a clean, integrated look. Square sinks bring a more sculptural, geometric energy — particularly striking in powder rooms and primary baths where the sink itself becomes part of the design vocabulary.
In kitchens, rectangular undermount sinks are the most popular choice for prep-oriented cooking spaces. Their generous interior dimensions accommodate large pans, baking sheets, and full-size dishes — practical considerations that matter more than people expect when they're standing at the sink every day. Available in marble, travertine, and limestone, rectangular and square sinks remain the safest, most adaptable starting point for any project.
Round & Oval — Soft Curves, Sculptural Presence
Round and oval sinks bring something rectangular shapes can't: organic softness. The curved silhouette echoes the natural shape of water itself and creates a more sculptural presence than the strict geometry of squares and rectangles. For homeowners and designers who want their sink to read as art rather than appliance, round and oval are often the answer.
Round vessel sinks are particularly popular in powder rooms and primary baths, where they sit on top of the vanity and display the full sculptural form of the stone. Carved from a single block of marble, travertine, or limestone, a round vessel sink looks more like a hand-thrown bowl than a fixture — and brings a quiet, artisan quality to the space.
Oval sinks soften the bathroom further, with elongated shapes that feel both classical and contemporary. They work especially well in master suites and spa-inspired baths, where the goal is calm and serenity. Round and oval sinks pair beautifully with curved mirrors, pendant lighting, and natural wood vanities — completing the sense of sculptural softness throughout the room.
Apron Front — The Classic Farmhouse Statement
Apron front sinks — also called farmhouse sinks — are the most architecturally distinctive shape in the collection. Unlike sinks that hide beneath a counter, the apron front sink projects outward, exposing its front face as a feature element of the kitchen itself. The result is a sink that doesn't just function — it anchors the room.
Carved from solid travertine, marble, or limestone, an apron front sink brings the kind of substantial weight and presence that defines traditional farmhouse, Mediterranean, and country-modern kitchens. The exposed front showcases the natural color and veining of the stone — making each sink a one-of-one piece of architecture rather than a replaceable fixture.
Apron front sinks are typically deeper than standard kitchen sinks, accommodating large pots, roasting pans, and the realities of cooking for a family. They pair beautifully with custom cabinetry, exposed hardware, and stone or butcher-block countertops. For homeowners building once-in-a-lifetime kitchens, an apron front sink is often the single most defining decision they make.
Specialty — Sculptural Shapes for One-of-a-Kind Spaces
Specialty sinks are for projects that don't follow the rules. Asymmetrical silhouettes, hand-shaped basins with irregular edges, sculptural designs that read more like art objects than fixtures — specialty sinks are the choice when standard shapes feel too predictable.
These pieces are most often selected for high-design powder rooms, statement primary baths, boutique hotel installations, and commercial spaces where a single fixture is meant to define the entire room. Carved from solid blocks of marble, travertine, or limestone, each specialty sink is genuinely unique — sometimes featuring natural rough edges, sculptural relief, or unconventional proportions that turn the sink into a design centerpiece.
For designers and homeowners willing to commit to a bolder, less conventional choice, specialty sinks deliver a level of individuality that no standard shape can match. They're rare by definition — and that's exactly what makes them memorable.
Trough — Extra-Wide Basins for Shared Spaces
Trough sinks are long, generously proportioned basins designed for spaces where two or more people use the sink at the same time. In bathrooms, a trough sink under a double-vanity setup eliminates the need for two separate basins — creating a cleaner, more architectural look that feels more like a hotel or spa than a standard residential bath.
In kitchens, trough sinks function as oversized prep basins, ideal for serious home cooks, entertainers, and households that genuinely use the kitchen. Their length accommodates baking sheets, large cutting boards, and multi-step prep workflows that smaller sinks simply can't handle.
Hand-carved from a single block of stone, a trough sink is a substantial fixture — visually, structurally, and functionally. It pairs particularly well with wall-mounted faucets, dual mixer setups, and floating vanities or open-base cabinetry. For homeowners building shared bathrooms or serious working kitchens, a trough sink turns a practical decision into a design statement.
Corner — Space-Saving Shape for Compact Rooms
Corner sinks are the most practical shape in the collection. Designed to fit into the corner of a room rather than along a single wall, corner sinks open up valuable floor space in compact bathrooms, powder rooms, mudrooms, and small kitchens — without sacrificing the natural-stone elegance of the rest of the home.
In powder rooms and small baths, a corner sink lets a tight footprint feel intentional rather than constrained. In compact kitchens, accessory bars, and butler's pantries, corner sinks create functional prep or cleanup zones in spaces that would otherwise be wasted.
Carved from natural marble, travertine, or limestone, corner sinks bring the same hand-finished quality as larger formats — proving that small spaces deserve the same level of material consideration as primary rooms. For renovations, additions, and small-space projects, a natural stone corner sink is a quietly luxurious solution.
How to Choose the Right Shape
The right shape depends on three things: the space you're working with, the way the sink will be used, and the visual style you want to bring into the room.
Choose rectangular or square when you want clean, versatile lines that work in any style. Choose round or oval when you want a softer, more sculptural feel. Choose apron front when you want the sink to anchor a traditional or farmhouse kitchen. Choose specialty when you want a one-of-a-kind statement piece. Choose trough when the sink is shared by two or used for serious prep. Choose corner when space is limited but quality still matters.
Every sink in this collection is hand-carved from a single solid block of natural stone, with no seams, no veneers, and no two pieces alike. Browse the collections below to find the shape that fits your space — and turn one of the most-used surfaces in your home into one of the most beautiful.















































































