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Lotus Bowl - Rich Red

Lotus Bowl - Rich Red

$54.00
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Description

The Rich Red glaze is rich, textural, and comforting, echoing the deep, nourishing colour of fertile soil, finished with subtle flashes of russet where the heat of the kiln was most intense. This bowl feels immediately grounded and familiar, its visual weight suggesting a history of hands and use. The natural lip of the rim catches the light, highlighting the organic flow of the clay beneath the glaze.

It is the ideal vessel for a hearty, slow cooked winter meal or a rich, vibrant grain bowl, offering a palpable warmth that transfers from the bowl to the hand. Its deep, resonant presence makes it the natural centre of a relaxed, informal evening gathering, encouraging a sense of generosity, shared sustenance, and unhurried conversation around the table.

* Main Size: Ø160x85H mm | Volumn: 450mm | Weight: 400g

* Grand Size: Ø210x75H mm | Volumn: 500mm | Weight: 570g

details

We carry fragments of the East into a language you can live with today.

Release
2001
: :
Finish
Glossy / Matte
: :
Origin
longquan, szechuan
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Process
Transmutation glaze

maintenance

Caring for what you own is part of the experience.
Each cleaning, each gentle touch, is a quiet act of continuation.

  • Dishwasher & microwave safe; gentle cycles are best.
  • Avoid metal utensils or rough sponges on the surface.
  • After use, rinse and dry softly to preserve the glaze’s depth.
  • For light stains, soak briefly with baking soda and warm water.

Inspiration

Objects are not trophies. They are the quiet witnesses to how you live.

In Sichuan’s highlands, the air carries a weight of stillness. Mountains don’t rise suddenly here, they unfold, one behind another, until distance turns them into haze. Somewhere between the soil’s warmth and the mist’s coolness, the horizon becomes more than a line; it becomes a state of mind.

The Horizon Plate was born from that silence. Its shape echoes the slow curve of the land, where earth softens into air, where time feels suspended. This is not a story about ancient dynasties or lost traditions, it’s about the quiet rhythm of nature that has never needed to change.

Objects of Eastern Artistry,

Inherited for Modern Living.

The Artisan Behind

Nestled in Sichuan’s highlands, Chen Shujun has spent over four decades firing ceramics in a centuries old dragon kiln. Guided by instinct, not instruments, his work embraces time, fire, and imperfection. Each piece carries the quiet strength of a life shaped by the land.

Read More .

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