
- Material Ceramic
- Use Indoor
- Style Minimalist
- Care Hand wash
Thrown and finished by hand in Brooklyn, this ceramic vase is organized around one deliberate gesture — a deep concentric ridge that repeats the full height of the form. The result sits somewhere between sculpture and vessel, equally composed on a shelf with a single dried stem as it is left entirely empty. The matte finish absorbs light rather than reflecting it, giving each piece a quiet, settled presence that holds its ground without demanding attention.
Because each piece is made by hand in small batches, minor variations in ridge depth and surface tone are part of the work — no two are identical.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Thrown and finished by hand in Brooklyn, this ceramic vase is organized around one deliberate gesture — a deep concentric ridge that repeats the full height of the form. The result sits somewhere between sculpture and vessel, equally composed on a shelf with a single dried stem as it is left entirely empty. The matte finish absorbs light rather than reflecting it, giving each piece a quiet, settled presence that holds its ground without demanding attention.
Because each piece is made by hand in small batches, minor variations in ridge depth and surface tone are part of the work — no two are identical.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The one vase that works with almost nothing
A single dried lotus pod drops into the neck. The ridges catch the afternoon light in bands. You stop arranging and just leave it — which was the point all along.



