
© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Complemento's rocking chair.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Viviana Bowles' couch.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Marco Justiniano's bench. WWF Bolivia bought this piece and currently has it in its office, aiming at staying close to this One Tree.

© WWF Bolivia
Maya Mac Lean says: "I made a table where you can clearly appreciate the different sections of the tree’s root. I tried to make something beautiful and functional."

© WWF Bolivia
Nadia Callaú designed and manually produced three lamps made of sawdust of a tree's plank.

© WWF Bolivia
"My finished piece is a peach split in two, including its seed", says Wara Cardozo. "I decided to make this piece because the original piece of tree I decided to work with insinuated that's what it wanted to become, and so I thought I better help it blossom."

© WWF Bolivia
Verónica Weise used wood from the trunk of the tree to elaborate a necklace and a bracelet.

© WWF Bolivia
Marbella Callaú says: "The tables I made are functional, utilitarian; but with a touch of design and art".

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
La Chonta Woods' rocking chair.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Tatiana Fernández' light shelve.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Armando Landivar's "Dreaming musician" sculpture.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Claudia Pérez' mobile, made of the tree's benches and Copper.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Yasuko Kitayama's textile, dyed with inks made of the tree’s bark, fiber, sawdust and leaves.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Roxana Callaú's butterfly corner shelve.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Roberto Valcárcel's twisted shelve.

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
Ejti Stih's decorative objects, called by her "The last seal", made of the tree’s fruit and ceramic.

© WWF Bolivia
María Eugenia Moraes waited for the materials to tell her what they wanted to become. When the fruits opened and she saw the seeds, they told her "I want to be a dragonfly; I want to be a mobile..."

© WWF Bolivia / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTER
One of Leticia García's masks, made of bark and enamelwork from the burnt tree ashes.

© WWF Bolivia
Using fibers, leaves, fruits, seeds and bark, Marión Macedo created an extraordinary attire: a hat of leaves, a corset of sawdust, a skirt of sawdust flowers and fiber jewelry.