About
beauty that lives in use
Our pottery lives where the ordinary meets the extraordinary. We work with simple, familiar forms—cups, bowls, everyday objects made to be used, not just admired. But layered onto them are glazes shaped by years of quiet experimentation—fluid surfaces born from fire and chance.
As philosopher Soetsu Yanagi observed, we often miss the beauty in the useful, believing it exists only in the exceptional. Yet, “a profounder beauty can be found in the practical art born to answer the immediate needs of life.” That’s what we're after: the kind of beauty that reveals itself not through spectacle, but through touch, use, and daily rituals.