Wrensilva’s Studio Console Turns Vinyl Listening Into A Luxury Home Statement

There is something different about a great record console. Not just a turntable sitting on top of a media stand. Not just a Bluetooth speaker tucked into the corner of the room. A real record console has presence. It changes the way a space feels before the music even starts.

That is where Wrensilva’s Studio console lands. The San Diego-based audio brand has built its name around high-end record consoles that feel as much like heirloom furniture as they do audio systems. With Studio, Wrensilva takes that same language of craftsmanship, sound, and analog ritual and brings it into a smaller, more versatile footprint.
At $9,900, this is not an impulse home audio buy. It is a luxury object for someone who sees music as part of the room, not just something playing in the background.

A Record Console Built Like Furniture
The Wrensilva Studio immediately separates itself from the average home audio setup because it looks finished. The console is crafted with a natural walnut cabinet, charcoal speaker fabric, and refined hardware details that give it a polished, architectural feel. It has the warmth of mid-century furniture without feeling like a retro costume piece. The design is clean enough for a modern apartment, rich enough for a den, and elevated enough to sit in a living room without needing to be hidden when guests come over.
That matters because most audio equipment asks the room to work around it. The Studio does the opposite. It becomes part of the room’s design story. It is compact by Wrensilva standards, measuring roughly 31 inches wide, but it still carries enough visual weight to feel intentional. The proportions make it easier to place in a home office, lounge, apartment, bedroom, or listening corner without requiring a full dedicated audio wall.

That smaller footprint is part of the appeal. This is for the person who wants real sound and real design, but does not want a giant component system taking over the entire space.
Vinyl First, But Not Vinyl Only
The heart of the Wrensilva Studio is still the turntable. The console features a belt-driven turntable with a one-piece magnesium tonearm and an Ortofon 2M Red cartridge, giving vinyl lovers a proper analog setup without the need to piece together separate components. There is a smoked acrylic dust cover to protect the deck, and the cabinet includes storage for up to 40 albums behind the front door.
That album storage is a small but important detail. It keeps the console from being just another beautiful audio object. It also understands the ritual of vinyl: pulling a record, opening the jacket, dropping the needle, and letting the room slow down for a bit. But Wrensilva also knows most people do not live in one format anymore.

The Studio includes Bluetooth, auxiliary input, and optional Sonos integration, giving it a modern streaming lane alongside the vinyl setup. That means it can handle a Sunday morning record session, a dinner party playlist, or daily background music without feeling limited to one use case. In other words, it respects the analog experience without pretending digital music does not exist.
Sound With Serious Room Presence
The Studio is powered by a built-in 100-watt-per-channel Class D amplifier and integrated two-way bass reflex speakers. That gives the console real room-filling ability without requiring separate speaker stands, exposed wiring, or a stack of components.
The appeal is not just that it plays records. The appeal is that it simplifies the entire listening experience while still looking and sounding premium. Everything is built into one crafted cabinet, which makes the Studio feel less like gear and more like a finished lifestyle piece.

That also gives the console a strong hosting angle. This is the type of object that naturally becomes part of a room’s conversation. Someone sees it. Someone asks about it. Someone wants to hear it. Then the record goes on. That is when the piece makes sense.
The Grown-Man Room Upgrade
The Wrensilva Studio fits into a very specific kind of home upgrade. It is not about chasing the loudest speaker. It is not about building the most complicated audiophile system possible. It is about creating a space that feels more considered. A room with better sound, better design, and a stronger point of view.
That is why the Studio works as an interiors story as much as an audio story. It can anchor a listening corner. It can sit beside a lounge chair and a stack of books. It can warm up a modern living room. It can make a home office feel less temporary. It can turn a simple apartment wall into something with texture and intention.
And because it supports vinyl and streaming, it does not become a weekend-only object. It can actually live in the daily rhythm of the house. That balance is what makes it compelling. The Studio has enough design presence to feel luxurious, but enough function to justify being used every day.
Luxury Audio With A Lifestyle Point Of View
At nearly $10,000, the Wrensilva Studio is clearly playing in a premium category. But the price is attached to more than a turntable. It is tied to the cabinet, the amplifier, the speakers, the storage, the craftsmanship, and the overall design system. For someone who would otherwise buy a high-end turntable, separate speakers, an amp, a console table, and then still have to make it all look clean, the Studio offers a much more elegant answer.
It is a complete statement. That is also where Wrensilva’s larger brand world comes through. The company is not just selling sound. It is selling the idea of listening as a luxury ritual. The kind of thing that turns music from background noise into something you actually make time for.
There is a reason vinyl keeps having staying power with design-minded consumers. It gives music a physical presence again. The Studio leans into that without feeling dusty or nostalgic. It makes the record console feel current, refined, and ready for the modern home.

Final Thoughts
Wrensilva’s Studio console is for the person who wants their home audio setup to look as good as it sounds. It brings together vinyl, streaming, built-in speakers, album storage, walnut craftsmanship, and luxury furniture design in one clean package. More importantly, it understands that great interiors are not just about how a room looks. They are also about how a room feels.
With Studio, Wrensilva gives music a proper place in the home again. And for anyone looking to make their living room, office, or listening space feel more grown, more intentional, and more personal, this console makes a very strong case.






