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Still Life - Bud Vases
Three inches or less. One stem. Infinite possibilities.
These small-batch bud vases were wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Oregon stoneware clay, each one a quiet study in form and glaze. No two are identical — the shapes shift subtly from piece to piece, the glazes tell their own story, and the scale is deliberately, unapologetically small.
Small enough for a single wildflower. A sprig of rosemary. A cutting from the garden you keep meaning to tend. They are equally happy holding nothing at all, arranged on a shelf like a little chorus of very dignified objects.
These are the vases for the windowsill, the bedside table, the corner of the kitchen counter that deserves something beautiful. They have the quiet confidence of things that don't need to try very hard.
Collect one. Collect several. Stack them, cluster them, line them up in a row and marvel at how something so small can do so much work in a room.
Available individually or as a curated set. Each piece is one-of-a-kind.
Three inches or less. One stem. Infinite possibilities.
These small-batch bud vases were wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Oregon stoneware clay, each one a quiet study in form and glaze. No two are identical — the shapes shift subtly from piece to piece, the glazes tell their own story, and the scale is deliberately, unapologetically small.
Small enough for a single wildflower. A sprig of rosemary. A cutting from the garden you keep meaning to tend. They are equally happy holding nothing at all, arranged on a shelf like a little chorus of very dignified objects.
These are the vases for the windowsill, the bedside table, the corner of the kitchen counter that deserves something beautiful. They have the quiet confidence of things that don't need to try very hard.
Collect one. Collect several. Stack them, cluster them, line them up in a row and marvel at how something so small can do so much work in a room.
Available individually or as a curated set. Each piece is one-of-a-kind.
