Before astrology apps, before charts on screens, and long before algorithms told people who they were, the zodiac was something you studied, displayed, and lived with.

This is a vintage zodiac astrology globe, crafted in metal with an Old World aesthetic, mounted on a solid wood base, and measuring approximately 10 inches in diameter. It’s the kind of object that feels like it belongs in a study, a library, or a room where conversations tend to run long and thoughtful.

Every astrological sign is represented, arranged around the celestial sphere the way it was meant to be — not simplified, not cartooned, but presented as a cosmic map. The metal surface gives it weight and presence, while the warm wood base grounds it firmly in the physical world.

This piece lives at the intersection of:

It doesn’t shout mysticism. It assumes you already understand it.

Collectors are drawn to these because they’re timeless. Interior designers love them because they add intelligence and intrigue to a space without leaning kitsch. And astrology enthusiasts appreciate them because they treat the zodiac as something enduring, not trendy.

Set it on a desk, shelf, or side table and it immediately becomes a conversation starter — the kind that invites people to lean in, trace symbols with their eyes, and talk about things bigger than the room they’re standing in.

You don’t buy this globe because you need décor.
You buy it because it reflects curiosity, perspective, and an appreciation for ideas that have outlived centuries.

Objects like this don’t date themselves.
They anchor a room.