Wrensilva Studio combines luxury furniture and HiFi vinyl audio for $10,000

I am not going to lie, folks, I absolutely love the new Wrensilva Studio record console. The design is stunning, the hardware looks to be legitimately high end, and it looks like the sort of thing you proudly build an entire room around. Unfortunately, I do not love the asking price. At $9,900 (available here), this is one of those products that instantly reminds you rich people live very differently than the rest of us.

Still, I cannot stop looking at it.

The new Studio model joins the company’s existing lineup alongside the Wrensilva M1 and Wrensilva The Standard, but this version is supposed to be the more approachable option. That is a funny thing to say about a nearly five figure record player, but compared to some of the company’s other offerings, I guess it technically is.

Wrensilva Sound B

What makes the Studio stand out is that it does not just look like audio gear. It looks like beautiful furniture. The cabinet is made from hand selected natural walnut hardwood, paired with charcoal speaker fabric and a black anodized pedestal base with walnut inlay. There is even a smoked acrylic lid and soft lighting built into the turntable deck. It honestly feels more like luxury home décor than consumer electronics.

And yes, I mean that as a compliment.

The dimensions are relatively compact too, measuring 31 inches wide, 33 inches tall, and 17 inches deep, although opening the lid raises the height to 50 inches. There is also built in storage for up to 40 vinyl albums, which is neat, even if hardcore collectors will fill that space in about five minutes.

Wrensilva Sound D

Thankfully, Wrensilva did not focus only on aesthetics. The internals actually sound impressive on paper. The Studio features a floating turntable deck, under platter belt drive system, frosted acrylic platter, and an Ortofon 2M Red cartridge. Power comes from a 100 watt per channel ICEpower Class D amplifier driving built in two way bass reflex speakers.

Wrensilva says the sound was shaped with help from folks like Manny Marroquin and Giles Martin. More importantly, the frequency response range and hardware choices suggest this is not some gimmicky Crosley style nostalgia box pretending to be premium audio gear.

Wrensilva Sound C

Another thing I appreciate is that the Studio embraces modern listening habits instead of acting like streaming music is the enemy. Alongside vinyl playback, it supports Bluetooth, auxiliary input, and optional Sonos integration. In other words, you can spin records one minute and stream music wirelessly the next without needing a separate setup cluttering your home.

That flexibility matters because most vinyl fans in 2026 are still using streaming services daily, no matter how romantic they feel about records.

Would I buy one if money were no object? Absolutely. I think this thing is gorgeous. But for $9,900, I also think Wrensilva is charging a serious luxury tax here. You can build an incredible standalone turntable and speaker setup for much less money.

Then again, that setup probably would not look this cool sitting in your living room…

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Brian Fagioli

Technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz

Brian Fagioli is a technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz. A former BetaNews writer, he has spent over a decade covering Linux, hardware, software, cybersecurity, and AI with a no nonsense approach for real nerds.

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