Luke & Lorelai

$250.00
sold out

Hand-built bird-footed bowls | Reclaimed stoneware | Approximately 4.5" and 4" tall | Oregon clay

They arrived together. They left together. Anyone who has seen Gilmore Girls knows it took them long enough.

Luke and Lorelei are hand-built from reclaimed stoneware — a mix of every clay body that's passed through the Portland studio, compressed and fired into something new. Flock pieces are born this way, out of necessity and leftover clay, which turns out to be exactly the right origin story for a bird. Or a diner owner. Or a fast-talking single mother in a small Connecticut town.

Luke's feather collar is matte chartreuse, layered with additional green glazes for dimension and texture — each frond reading differently in different light, the whole thing suggesting he has strong opinions and will be expressing them whether you asked or not. Lorelei's feathers are Papaya — warm, sun-baked orange-gold, the color of late afternoon somewhere you want to stay, probably with coffee. Both bowls are Coyote Satin White Liner inside and out, pooling softly at the rim. Both stand on Amaco Saturation Gold legs, fired to near-black with that signature hint of luster.

Together they are a study in contrast that somehow makes complete sense. Seven seasons worth of sense, if you think about it.

The smallest members of the Flock. Not the quietest.

One of a kind. Luke and Lorelei existed only once. They have since moved on — presumably to Stars Hollow.

Hand-built bird-footed bowls | Reclaimed stoneware | Approximately 4.5" and 4" tall | Oregon clay

They arrived together. They left together. Anyone who has seen Gilmore Girls knows it took them long enough.

Luke and Lorelei are hand-built from reclaimed stoneware — a mix of every clay body that's passed through the Portland studio, compressed and fired into something new. Flock pieces are born this way, out of necessity and leftover clay, which turns out to be exactly the right origin story for a bird. Or a diner owner. Or a fast-talking single mother in a small Connecticut town.

Luke's feather collar is matte chartreuse, layered with additional green glazes for dimension and texture — each frond reading differently in different light, the whole thing suggesting he has strong opinions and will be expressing them whether you asked or not. Lorelei's feathers are Papaya — warm, sun-baked orange-gold, the color of late afternoon somewhere you want to stay, probably with coffee. Both bowls are Coyote Satin White Liner inside and out, pooling softly at the rim. Both stand on Amaco Saturation Gold legs, fired to near-black with that signature hint of luster.

Together they are a study in contrast that somehow makes complete sense. Seven seasons worth of sense, if you think about it.

The smallest members of the Flock. Not the quietest.

One of a kind. Luke and Lorelei existed only once. They have since moved on — presumably to Stars Hollow.