
Thrown and glazed by hand in the Gharyan tradition, this twelve-piece set arrives in a deep, amber-fired terracotta tone that shifts subtly between pieces — each plate and bowl carrying its own read of the glaze. The stoneware body is substantial without being heavy, with a smooth interior glaze and an unglazed rim that reveals the raw clay beneath. Dinner plates measure 11.2 inches across, side plates 9.4 inches, and the wide-mouthed bowls sit at 5.5 by 3 inches — a considered range of forms that work together at every course.
As with all hand-made work, glaze pooling, rim variation, and slight tonal shifts between pieces are the mark of the process — not imperfections.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Thrown and glazed by hand in the Gharyan tradition, this twelve-piece set arrives in a deep, amber-fired terracotta tone that shifts subtly between pieces — each plate and bowl carrying its own read of the glaze. The stoneware body is substantial without being heavy, with a smooth interior glaze and an unglazed rim that reveals the raw clay beneath. Dinner plates measure 11.2 inches across, side plates 9.4 inches, and the wide-mouthed bowls sit at 5.5 by 3 inches — a considered range of forms that work together at every course.
As with all hand-made work, glaze pooling, rim variation, and slight tonal shifts between pieces are the mark of the process — not imperfections.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The set that makes dinner feel considered
Tagine on Sunday, pasta on Tuesday — these plates hold whatever arrives without fuss. The warm terracotta glaze catches candlelight the way good dinnerware should, making the table feel set even before the food lands.



