
Cast in a brass-finish metal, the Misla Saucer reads less like a dish and more like something found — a gathered petal, a shell turned shallow. Its undulating rim rises and dips in an organic wave, catching light differently depending on the hour. Low and wide, it holds a ring, a matchbook, a stone — small objects that deserve a considered place to land. Sold as a set of two.
As with all small-batch metalwork, each saucer carries its own surface variation — a slight deepening here, a warmer tone there — that settles in over time.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Cast in a brass-finish metal, the Misla Saucer reads less like a dish and more like something found — a gathered petal, a shell turned shallow. Its undulating rim rises and dips in an organic wave, catching light differently depending on the hour. Low and wide, it holds a ring, a matchbook, a stone — small objects that deserve a considered place to land. Sold as a set of two.
As with all small-batch metalwork, each saucer carries its own surface variation — a slight deepening here, a warmer tone there — that settles in over time.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The smallest surface earns the most attention
On the nightstand, beside a stack of books — the Misla Saucer holds a ring set down at the end of the day, a matchstick, nothing much. It is quiet in the way that only well-made things can be.



